Irwin said, “Cracking it on a bit. What can she do?” The midshipman smiled, and it made him look like the schoolboy he had so recently been. “She can manage fifteen knots, sir.” The smile broadened. “With a following wind, that is!
Something sinister is afoot in the house in the west of Ireland in which Sherlock is staying.
. . Voted as one of the UK's best-loved books, Malorie Blackman's Noughts & Crosses series is a seminal piece of YA fiction; a true modern classic. 'Moving and thought-provoking' Observer
The perfect book for fans of serial killer thrillers and crime writers such as Peter James, Mark Billingham and Peter Robinson He didn't intend to let her get so close But Robert Naysmith's girlfriend Kim has become important to him.
Teen Sherlock battles a monstrous adversary on a mission to Ireland with his brilliant brother, Mycroft.
'The best kind of thriller - step by all-too-plausible step we're sucked into frantic, breathless action .
My rear end was blood-raw from my so-called brilliant ideas rebounding on me. I glanced down the ward to the ... If Meggie had come to hurt me or my baby, would I have time to shout for help? ... "Mrs. McGregor, I—" "My name's Meggie.
This is a riveting and page-turning novel for ages twelve and up that will confirm Malorie Blackman's status as one of today's top authors for young readers.
In this harrowing near-future thriller, a teen girl reeling from a recent tragedy tries to do the right thing knowing one wrong move could unravel her society’s fragile order.
Sephy is a dark-skinned Cross in a society where people are judged by their colour and Crosses have the power.
The explosive sequel to EYE CONTACT.
'The Noughts & Crosses series are still my favourite books of all time and showed me just how amazing story-telling could be' STORMZY 'I grew up reading her. It was one of the few books about black people, so I felt seen.
"First published in Great Britain by Macmillan Children's Books, 2013."
Knife Edge (Messers Schneide), originally published in Germany in 1986, introduces American readers to the work of Ralf Rothmann, an award-winning poet and novelist born in Schleswig in 1953.
Knife Edge (Messers Schneide), originally published in Germany in 1986, introduces American readers to the work of Ralf Rothmann, an award-winning poet and novelist born in Schleswig in 1953.