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Plotting pirates

The first piratical act in Daniel Handler's We Are Pirates is a flamboyant burst of shoplifting by teenage Gwen.

April 8, 2015 15:39
08042015 We Are Pirates jacket

ByAngela Kiverstein, Angela Kiverstein

1 min read

The first piratical act in Daniel Handler's We Are Pirates (Bloomsbury Circus, £12.99) is a flamboyant burst of shoplifting by teenage Gwen. Though it horrifies her parents - struggling radio producer Phil and diet-ravaged Marina - it is nothing to what follows when Gwen teams up with rebel teen Amber and former sea captain Errol, a resident of the local old-age home.

Looking after Errol is Gwen's punishment but things get gory when the trio take to the high seas as pirates - accidentally kidnapping a nice Jewish schoolboy and scuppering Phil Needle's big radio break in the process. The quirky humour of Handler (aka Lemony Snicket) keeps the plot bobbing along but it eventually runs aground on the rocks of credibility. Age 12 up.

For more swashbuckling adventures, plus insights into Chinese and English history, The History Keepers: Nightship to China by Damien Dibben (Corgi, £7.99) is also recommended. Age 11 up.

Apple and Rain by Sarah Crossan (Bloomsbury, £6.99) is not just another story of a teenage girl reunited with her birth mother and befriended by a quirky boy. It is also about torn loyalty towards her grandmother, who has brought her up; the subtleties of school bullying; and the ability of poetry to express emotional truth. Age 10 up.