Sophie Maxim
is an unusual young girl. She wears trousers and boys’ shirts, and social
worker, Miss Elis believes that is unacceptable for a girl of Sophie’s age to
be wearing boys’ clothing. Sophie was swept into Charles Maxim’s care when she
was found drifting in a cello case on the English Channel amongst the wreckage
of the Queen Mary (a boat). How a baby got into the cello case is a mystery in
itself.
Everyone constantly reminds Sophie that her
mother is dead and that she died in the shipwreck, though Sophie has other
ideas! Charles and Sophie go on an adventure of mother-hunting in the gloomy
streets of Paris, where she meets the extraordinary, roof climbing Matteo. Together Matteo and Sophie uncover what
happened to her mother.
Rooftoppers
is a fantastic middle grade novel which made me laugh. There are peculiar
moments and those heart beating happy ones too.
The novel is written in third person
narrative which is a change as I have recently realised that many books I read
now are in first person. This could possibly be because many young teen books
try to engage you with exactly how the characters are feeling. This means it
leaves little to your imagination about how the character could be feeling. The
way Katherine Rundell has written Rooftoppers engaged me in how Sophie was
feeling but also gave me different perspectives on each character. For instance, you get a feel for how Charles
and Matteo were feeling or even what the city looked like but not from a biased
perspective.
I really
enjoyed this novel and I believe it deserves to be a winner of the CILIP
Carnegie. I hugely recommend Rooftoppers if you haven’t already read it. Many
people dismiss middle grade novels as they are written for a young audience;
they shouldn’t be ignored just because they are aimed at a younger audience.
They are just as good as many young adult novels and this is most definitely
one of those.
Publication
Details: 2013, Faber and Faber, London, paper back.
Copy: For review from publishers-CILIP Carnegie
2014