Wildcat Moon
by Babs Horton
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Description
The Skallies, a row of tumbledown houses built on the wind-lashed coast, is a wild and curious place. A place for people down on their luck. A place where people come to hide. Ten-year-old Archie Grimble, with his crippled leg and one good eye, lived a miserable existence there. Then a chance encounter with an unhappy little girl and the discovery of a locked diary set him on a mission: unraveling the mystery of a boy who drowned off Skilly Point in August 1900. But Archie's investigation show more was to have unexpected consequences. A shocking murder and an unexplained abduction are to shatter his exciting new world... show lessTags
Member Reviews
I loved this author's first outing "A Jarful of Angels" but feared this would be a re-write. The similarities are easy to spot: an out of the way setting in the 1960s peopled by oddballs, some imaginative children, a disappearance or two, a Mediterranean connection and everyone swears a lot. There's nothing wrong with writing to a winning formula I suppose - let's be honest it never stopped Dan Brown - but I had my concerns.
Having finished I can report that the two books are very different whilst retaining common themes. This one has more mysteries per square inch - probably more than any book I've ever read. Good in a way - there is something there to interest every reader - but also bad because the overall effect is confusing. There show more was also at least one event that pushed credulity a bit too far - right to the edge of the cliffs of disbelief, and sent it plunging into the Sea of Scepticism.
Overall, it's value for money and worth a look if you like a book with plenty going on. I just think it's one of those cases where less might have been more. show less
Having finished I can report that the two books are very different whilst retaining common themes. This one has more mysteries per square inch - probably more than any book I've ever read. Good in a way - there is something there to interest every reader - but also bad because the overall effect is confusing. There show more was also at least one event that pushed credulity a bit too far - right to the edge of the cliffs of disbelief, and sent it plunging into the Sea of Scepticism.
Overall, it's value for money and worth a look if you like a book with plenty going on. I just think it's one of those cases where less might have been more. show less
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Author Information
Common Knowledge
- People/Characters
- Archie Grimble; Romilly Greswode; Thomas Greswode; Benjamin Tregantle; Nan Abelson; Cissie Abelson (show all 12); Eloise Fanthorpe; Lena Galvini; Alfredo Galvini; Clementine Fernaud; Jonathan Greswode; Margot Greswode
- Dedication
- For Pat and Terry Cowan
- Last words
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)"And there's six fingers on the one hand."
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Statistics
- Members
- 14
- Popularity
- 1,678,624
- Reviews
- 1
- Rating
- (4.50)
- Languages
- English
- Media
- Paper, Audiobook
- ISBNs
- 4


