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Barbara Else

Auteur de The Travelling Restaurant

29+ oeuvres 271 utilisateurs 20 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Barbara Else was born in 1947 in Invercargill, New Zealand. She earned an MA (Hons) from Otago University. She has worked as a university tutor, an editor, a freelance writer and has given workshops on getting published. In 1999, she was named a Writer-in-Residence at Victoria University and in afficher plus 2004 she was awarded a Scholarship in Letters from Creative New Zealand. She became a member of the New Zealand Order of Merit (MNZM) for services to literature in 2005. Her work includes the plays, Night for Clowns and A Very Short History of the World. Her novels include The Warrior Queen, The Volume of Possible Endings: A Tale of Fontania, Gingerbread Husbands, Eating Peacocks, Three Pretty Widows, The Case of the Missing Kitchen, and Wild Latitudes. Her children's book, The Travelling Restaurant, won the New Zealand Post Children's Book Award. She also won the College of Education/Creative New Zealand Writer in Residence 2016 from the University of Otago and The Margaret Mahy Award 2016. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Séries

Œuvres de Barbara Else

The Travelling Restaurant (2011) 61 exemplaires
The Warrior Queen (1995) 39 exemplaires
Gingerbread Husbands (1997) 24 exemplaires
Eating peacocks (1998) 13 exemplaires
Wild Latitudes (2007) 12 exemplaires
Three Pretty Widows (2000) 7 exemplaires
The Case of the Missing Kitchen (2003) 5 exemplaires
Harsu and the Werestoat (2019) 4 exemplaires

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Critiques

Note: I received a digital review copy of this book from the publisher through NetGalley.
 
Signalé
fernandie | 2 autres critiques | Sep 15, 2022 |
I really wanted to like The Queen and the Nobody Boy -- the cover is great and the premise intriguing. And, for the most part, I did enjoy it. But I also found it unusually slow, for a children's book, for me to get through, and I often felt as though I were missing something, like background information or other explanations. The Queen and the Nobody Boy is described as a stand-alone companion to [b:The Traveling Restaurant: Jasper's Voyage in Three Parts|13131931|The Traveling Restaurant Jasper's Voyage in Three Parts (A Tale of Fontania #1)|Barbara Else|https://d202m5krfqbpi5.cloudfront.net/books/1348960358s/13131931.jpg|15799731], but I do wonder if perhaps reading The Traveling Restaurant first, which I did not, would help with understanding The Queen and the Nobody Boy.

Although the book is technically a fantasy, I would recommend it more to children who are interested in adventures or mysteries. The concept of magic is a central plot point, but the actual action of the book doesn't involve all that much magic or other fantasy elements. It does, however, involve quite a lot of adventure (flying through the air on a train, escaping from an enemy city, distracting giant poisonous toads) and mystery (Where are Hodie's parents? Will the Queen develop magical abilities? Where are the missing treasures?).

Note: I received a digital copy of this book through NetGalley.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
fernandie | 3 autres critiques | Sep 15, 2022 |
I picked this off the library shelf because it looked interesting, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. I'm hoping I can convince y boys to read it! Entertaining, a bit puzzling, some humor, an al-around fun read, and not dumbed down for kids at all.
 
Signalé
emrsalgado | 7 autres critiques | Jul 23, 2021 |
Jasper is turning twelve, but for some reason his parents won’t tell anyone his real age. They keep him inside most of the time and won’t let him go to school. But when he tells them that he spotted Lady Gall, the Provisional Monarch of Fontania, try to poison his little sister Sibilla, they gather up the family and bolt. What do they know that they’re not telling him?

When he gets left behind, Jasper ends up boarding a strange boat called The Traveling Restaurant, whose crew consists of an eclectic duo, Polly and Dr. Rocket. The longer Jasper travels with these two, the more secrets he uncovers about who they are, who his family is, and who really ought to be ruling over Fontania. He also discovers why Lady Gall has outlawed magic – and where it went when it became illegal.

Brave the storms and the pirates, the monkeys and the downright rude orphan girls, with Jasper as he journeys on the ship that’s known in every town as the Traveling Restaurant…and find out why it’s much more than what it seems.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
rhowens | 7 autres critiques | Nov 26, 2019 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
29
Aussi par
2
Membres
271
Popularité
#85,376
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
20
ISBN
64
Langues
2

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