Gr 4–6—After the climactic events of
How to Catch a Bogle (Houghton Harcourt, 2013), Alfred Bunce has retired from killing the monsters that lurk in London. His former apprentice, Birdie McAdam, has moved on to study singing while living with the wealthy folklorist, Miss Eames. Jem Barbary, a former pickpocket, has bounced around from job to job, consumed with the desire for revenge against Sarah Pickles, who sold him off to be bogle bait. But when children go missing around Newgate prison, Alfred reluctantly agrees to take on another bogling job with Jem as his apprentice. Jem proves himself to be nimble and spry, using his quickness and acrobatics to escape bogles. One job leads to another and Alfred is unsettled by the unusually large concentration of bogles in one area. He and Jem are joined by Birdie and Miss Eames as they attempt to discover what has brought so many monsters to the same place. This second book in the trilogy is as engaging as the first, with exciting action scenes and a new protagonist as its focal point. Jem is used to relying on himself and though he is resourceful, he lacks Birdie's confidence. His practical outlook and determination make him an appealing character, even as his single-minded focus on finding the woman who betrayed him threatens to uproot the place he has found with Alfred. Well paced and with details and dialogue that transport readers to the streets (and sewers) of Victorian London, there is much to enjoy in this excellent adventure series.—
Amanda Raklovits, Champaign Public Library, IL
In this sequel to How to Catch a Bogle, street urchin Jem
hopes to make a living catching child-eating bogles and to get
revenge on Sarah Pickles, who betrayed him. Jem discovers that his
aims are related: when he finds Sarah, he also finds the source of
the bogle proliferation. With plenty of action and colorful
Victorian street language, this is a speedy, characterful yarn.
Glos.
Jinks continues the drama begun in How to Catch a Bogle (rev. 9/13) in this fast-paced, quasi-Victorian fantasy in which London is plagued by child-eating bogles. The first volume's "bogle bait," Birdie, is now living with genteel Miss Eames and being educated; Jem, street urchin and friend of Birdie's, hopes to move up in the world and take Birdie's place working with Alfred Bunce, the bogle-catcher. Jem has two aims: to make a living helping with bogle-catching; and to find and take revenge on Sarah Pickles, the woman who abused and betrayed him in the past. As children disappear in increasing numbers and bogles multiply, a horrified Jem discovers that his aims are related: when he finds Sarah, he also finds the source of the bogle proliferation. With a linear narrative, plenty of action and dialogue, and an ample smattering of colorful Victorian street language (boozing ken, bluebottle: glossary included), this is a speedy, characterful yarn. The looming architecture of London's streets and the dank, echoing clamminess of its sewers enhance the pungent atmosphere of the setting. deirdre f. baker
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