Maggot Moon

Maggot Moon

By Author / Illustrator

Sally Gardner, Julian Crouch (Artist/Theatre Producer)

Genre

Adventure

Age range(s)

11+

Publisher

Hot Key Books

ISBN

9781471400445

Format

Paperback / softback

Published

03-01-2013

Synopsis

A starkly original and heartbreaking tale of friendship and rebellionWinner of the Carnegie Medal and a 2012 Costa Award winner. Narrated against the backdrop of a ruthless regime determined to beat its enemies in the race to the moon, MAGGOT MOON is the stunning new novel from award-winning author Sally Gardner.When his best friend Hector is suddenly taken away, Standish Treadwell realises that it is up to him, his grandfather and a small band of rebels to confront and defeat the ever-present oppressive forces of the Motherland. Utterly original and stunning, it is impossible not to be moved by MAGGOT MOON's powerful story and the unforgettable heroism of Standish.Now set in a font specially developed for dyslexic readers.

Reviews

Naomi

Standish Treadwell. Can't read, can't write. Standish Treadwell isn't bright. So sing the school bullies as they give Standish yet another beating. The beatings that make him believe school is invented 'just so the bullies...could beat...[up] kids like me'. Standish Treadwell is the protagonist and hero of Maggot Moon. His old teacher, Miss Connolly and his best friend, Hector recognise him as 'an original'. 'There are train-track thinkers, then there's you, Standish, a breeze in the park of imagination.' And even the leather-coat man who comes from the Motherland tells Standish: 'I don't think for one moment you are as stupid as you would like us to believe.' He's not. Standish knows that: 'If you are clever, know more than you should, you stand out like a green sky above a blue field, and, as we all know, the President of the Motherland believes that artists who do those sorts of paintings should be sterilised.' It is 1956 but not the 1956 we know for this is the dystopia that could've existed had Germany won World War II. This is never openly stated but there are enough clues; the Motherland, the salute, the children with 'impurities' who are 'sent away'. Standish lives with his granddad because his own parents have been taken by the Greenflies. He makes friends with Hector when Hector and his family are sent to live in Zone Seven and end up in Standish's family's old house. They've been banished from Zone One after Hector's father has refused to do something for the government, something he keeps secret to protect Standish and his grandfather. But when Hector and Standish's red football goes over the back wall, they all end up involved in something they shouldn't. This is a tightly plotted novel with a brilliant narrator. It has a beautiful friendship at the heart of it and a dyslexic boy who proves that finding reading and writing difficult doesn't mean you're stupid or afraid to stand up for what you believe in. It's also beautifully written; I kept stopping to quote lines to my partner. Maggot Moon deserves every ounce of praise that's been heaped upon it. It's perfect for teenagers (and slightly younger if you don't mind the swearing and occasional violence) and adults alike. A superb book.

Suggested Reading Age 11+

 

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