I got sent a poster for the new Skulduggery Pleasant book, and so did a bit of investigating. There's a fantastic video on the website that you can send to your friends, and on the Richard and Judy kids Book award page there is a chapter of the book to download.
Friday, 26 October 2007
I want to read this book
I got sent a poster for the new Skulduggery Pleasant book, and so did a bit of investigating. There's a fantastic video on the website that you can send to your friends, and on the Richard and Judy kids Book award page there is a chapter of the book to download.
Richard and Judy best Kids Books

Last night Richard and Judy presented the Best Kids Books award show to try and find the best books for children of all ages. I was watching with interest because 2 children I teach were appearing on it, talking about books for fluent readers. The group, chosen from book groups all over Sheffield had to read 4 books and decide which ones they liked best. They also had quick interviews with Jacqueline Wilson, Anthony Horowitz and Phillip Pullman. In the video, Jacqueline Wilson talks about her favourite character and where she gets her ideas from.
There is also a forum where you can discuss books with other kids who love reading.This is part of Channel 4's Lost for words season, where their aim is to get kids reading. You can watch celebrities talking about their favourite books on the website. Here, Chris O'Dowd from the hilarious IT Crowd reads from Winnie-the-Pooh.
Thursday, 25 October 2007
Poe death mystery solved?
An American writer, Matthew Pearl researched Poe's death for three years whilst writing his book, The Poe Shadow. He thinks that he knows the reason Poe died so young, and also why he suffered from amnesia, hallucinations and fits: brain cancer. This article in the Observer newspaper explains how he came to his conclusion and it involves something dear to Poe's own heart, namely digging up a corpse.
When Poe's body was exhumed to be moved to a better spot in the cemetery, observers talked about being able to see his shrunken brain.
It was described as being 'dried and hardened in the skull' in an 1878 article in the St Louis Republican newspaper, whereas a letter in the Baltimore Gazette claimed that: 'The cerebral mass... evidenced no sign of disintegration or decay, though, of course, it is somewhat diminished.'
But the brain, as a pathologist whom Pearl consulted pointed out, is one of the first parts of the body to rot away. What the people who saw the corpse saw might well have been a calcified (hardened) brain tumor. This tumor would have been responsible for Poe's mood swings, his thirst, his depressions and erratic behaviour. But it was these strange moods and feelings which produced many of his memorable works, so I will agree with poe himself when he says,
"Never to suffer would never to have been blessed."

