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Top of the tales in 2009

Our children’s books editor looks back at past highlights, rounds up the current crop and anticipates some of those to come.

December 22, 2009 16:04
Aliens in Underpants

By

Angela Kiverstein,

Angela Kiverstein

1 min read

Teddy bears and teenage spies were among the highlights of children’s fiction in 2009.

Winner of the Booktrust Teenage prize was Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book (Bloomsbury, £7.99, age 11 to adult), in which young Nobody Owens is brought up by strange foster parents — a vampire and a family of ghosts, while Gaiman’s Coraline, featuring sinister bogus parents with button eyes, was made into an animated film.

An altogether cosier world unfolded in Return to the Hundred Acre Wood (Egmont, £12.99), in which David Benedictus created marvellously Milne-like new adventures for Christopher Robin and his friends as replete with enchanting details as its furry hero was with honey and condensed milk.

Morris Gleitzman followed Once, his Holocaust-escape novel, with Then (Puffin, £5.99, age 11 upwards), in which Felix and Zelda continued to dodge their Nazi pursuers, trusting in the spirit of Richmal Crompton to keep them safe.

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