Review
A writer with an utterly distinctive voice and a wild imagination –Philip Pullman
Review
A writer with an utterly distinctive voice and a wild imagination Author: Philip Pullman Published On: 2013-01-18
I enjoyed it tremendously… An ultra stylish writer with a true gift for imaginative storytelling. The next time I go to Paris I will be looking up at the rooftops. Source: Jacqueline Wilson
A rare and remarkable treat, witty and full of original thoughts … This quirky book advocates curiosity, thoughtfulness, freedom and courage. Author: Nicolette Jones Source: Sunday Times
Rooftoppers takes its cue from the French film Amelie. It’s set in a not-quite-real, possibly 19th-century world where winsomeness is the order of the day as an orphaned girl searches for her cellist mother among the rooftops of Paris … dreamy kids will love it Source: Daily Telegraph
There is a wistful, old-fashioned charm to Katherine Rundell’s second novel: her poetic language and imaginative approach set this book apart from many other adventure stories for this age group. Whimsical, beautifully-written and as carefully balanced as the tightrope Sophie learns to walk, Rooftoppers is a sensitive and emotionally-resonant novel with an uplifting message about the power of hope. Source: Booktrust
RecallingThe Invention of Hugo Cabret, the gripping Rooftoppers, is set partly among the feral orphans living in Paris’s night sky, and comes recommended by Philip Pullman. Author: Kate Kellaway Source: Observer
Charles Maxim brings Sophie up to write on wallpaper and have the occasional nip of whisky … Rundell writes with a similar disregard for convention – the childcare officer has a voice “like a window slamming shut” – so your children may dare to live dangerously, but at least they’ll steer clear of clichés. Author: Dinah Hall Source: Daily Telegraph
Love and courage turn out to be two words for the same thing. Sophie learns to value and retain the strangeness she was born with and, in holding on to her child’s ability to believe in the extraordinary, to “never ignore a possible”. Source: Guardian Published On: 2013-05-18
A wonderfully told and vividly imagined story of love, hope and friendship Source: Families Online
I think it takes a certain kind of writer who can make the ordinary seem extraordinary with a few sentences and capture your imagination and encourage you, if only for a little while, to see the world in a slightly different way than you’d normally do. And Ms Rundell’s definitely that kind of writer … I really hope other people join Sophie for her adventure because it’s truly magical. Source: Wear The Old Coat Blog
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My mother is still alive, and she is going to come for me one day. Everyone thinks that Sophie is an orphan. True, there were no other recorded female survivors from the shipwreck which left baby Sophie floating in the English Channel in a cello case, but Sophie remembers seeing her mother wave for help. Her guardian tells her it is almost impossible that her mother is still alive, but that means still possible. You should never ignore a possible. So when the Welfare Agency writes to her guardian threatening to send Sophie to an orphanage, she takes matters into her own hands and flees to Paris to look for her mother, starting with the only clue she has – the address of the cello maker. Evading the French authorities, she meets Matteo and his network of rooftoppers – urchins who live in the sky. Together they scour the city for Sophie’s mother before she is caught and sent back to London, and most importantly before she loses hope.