The Longest Whale Song
by Jacqueline Wilson
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Ella's mum is in a deep coma, having just had a new baby. That means Ella has to live with Jack, her hopeless stepfather, and cope with her tiny newborn brother, as well as worrying about Mum. The only thing that's going right is her school project. It's all about whales and how they sing out to each other to attract a mate - sometimes for hours. Maybe a whale song could reach Mum, wherever she is, and bring her back to Ella and baby Samson. Surely it's worth a try?Tags
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I really enjoyed this, which is a solidly typical Jacqueline Wilson. Ella's mum has remarried, and is having a baby with her step-dad, who Ella generally resents for messing up the shape of her life. But then her mum ends up gravely ill in a coma after having the baby and Ella and her step-dad have to learn to support each other while looking after the baby.
It captures some of the rawness of grief perfectly, when someone is trying so hard to be nice to you, and you're just angry and hurt and everything is _wrong_ and you're horrid back to them.
There's a lot of very Jacqueline Wilson-esque subplots - Ella's biological dad turns up for a chapter, and is ridiculously rubbish, Ella discovers that the nasty girl at schoolis nasty because show more she's got an abusive step-dad and a mum who is horrid to her , Ella finds out that when her best friend makes a new friend, she can make a new friend too, even if they're a boy!
I have to say, the thing I didn't like most about this book wasthe happy ending. The rest of it is really well crafted, the grief, the denial, trying to stay optimistic while the bad news comes in the cracks. I'm not saying I wanted Ella's mum to die, or to have to live in a PVS . But it felt like the strength of the story was showing how Ella manages to become closer to her step dad and brother, and get enthusiastic about her whale project, and make new friends, even though this terrible thing has happened. Tacking on a happy ending felt almost like it undermined all that. And it felt _so_ tacked on! It all happens on literally the last page, and feels very cliched and saccharine. I find myself wondering if Jacqueline Wilson had written the (in my opinion) more powerful ambiguous ending, where Ella is still sitting at her mum's bedside talking to her in her coma, and then got lent on with 'it's for kids, don't be so ridiculously bleak, of course her mum wakes up at the end' and tacked on the ending but her heart wasn't in it. show less
It captures some of the rawness of grief perfectly, when someone is trying so hard to be nice to you, and you're just angry and hurt and everything is _wrong_ and you're horrid back to them.
There's a lot of very Jacqueline Wilson-esque subplots - Ella's biological dad turns up for a chapter, and is ridiculously rubbish, Ella discovers that the nasty girl at school
I have to say, the thing I didn't like most about this book was
Repetitive, and while this is supposed to be a children's book, I would not have read it with my children. Simplistic, unfocused, and at times, cringeworthy.
I wrote a detailed review here. https://littleseabear.com/
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No activity since 2021
Jun 11, 2025English (UK)
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Red Dot 2014-2015 - Older Readers - Longlist
37 works; 4 members
Author Information

291+ Works 22,706 Members
Jacqueline Wilson was born in Bath, England on December 17, 1945. She always wanted to be a writer and as a teenager, started working as a journalist for Jackie magazine. Since becoming a full-time writer, she has written numerous novels including The Dare Game; Bad Girls; The Worry Website; Lola Rose; The Diamond Girls; Clean Break; and Hetty show more Feather. Her novels have been adapted numerous times for television, and commonly deal with such difficult topics as adoption, divorce, and mental illness. She has also won numerous awards including the Guardian Children's Fiction Award for The Illustrated Mum; the Smarties Prize, the Sheffield Children's Book Award and the Children's Book Award for Double Act; The Young Telegraph/Fully Booked Award in 1995 for The Bed and Breakfast Star; and the 2002 Blue Peter People's Choice Award for The Story of Tracy Beaker. In 2015 she made the New Zealand Best Seller List with her title The Butterfly Club. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Il canto infinito della balena
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