LoveReading4Kids Says
With a Transylvanian heritage, it’s perhaps no surprise that Piers Torday, award-winning author of The Lost Wild, should choose to write a story full of vampires and werewolves, and what a story it is!
Tibor is twelve, ostensibly an orphan, and a werewolf. His best friend Roza is a vampire, currently in the form of a (talking) Alsatian dog. Their privileged life at the House of Gold with Tibor’s guardian Baron Ambrus is interrupted when Tibor is despatched on a quest to find the most protected, powerful treasure in the world. As revealed by the spell-casting Professor Halim, he has a special gift which should give him a head start over the other searchers for the treasure, and he’s going to need it: as the professor reveals, in a rare moment of honesty, ‘where there is treasure, there will always be blood.’
As they get nearer their goal, Tibor and Roza have all sorts of enemies and dangers to overcome and realise that discovering the truth about themselves is as important as finding the treasure. In this magical fantasy world, power is held in the hands of a corrupt, cruel elite, which makes Tibor’s search for truth and light even more vital.
This is thrilling reading, moments of comradeship and shared humour countering the very real sense of darkness and danger; Tibor’s next adventure can’t come soon enough.
Andrea Reece
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About Piers Torday
Piers Torday began his career in theatre and then television as a producer and writer. His bestselling first book for children, The Last Wild, was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children's Book Award and nominated for the CILIP Carnegie Medal as well as numerous other awards. His second book, The Dark Wild, won the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize. The third book in the trilogy, The Wild Beyond, was published in 2015 to critical acclaim. His next book for children, There May Be a Castle, was published in October 2016.
In regular demand as a speaker at schools and festivals, Piers is also a reading helper with Beanstalk, a former judge on the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, a Patron of Reading at Heathmere School and a trustee of the Pleasance Theatre.
Born in Northumberland, Piers now lives in London with his husband and hopefully a cat.
Piers Torday writes...
I was born in Northumberland, which is possibly the one part of England where more animals live than people, and spent my early years crawling around on the floor of the popular children’s bookshop that my mother ran.
The first book I can remember reading is Peter Rabbit by Beatrix Potter. “Stop thief!”
I was a total bookworm and read everything I could lay my hands on, from Beatrix Potter to Babar, Moomintrolls to Hobbits. Some of my favourite books included Stig Of The Dump, The Land of Green Ginger and The Silver Sword.
I also loved comic books, especially all of Tintin and Asterix. So I tried to write one.
When I was 8, I won a cartoon competition in the local paper with my entry “Super Sid”, a comic strip about a superhero called Sid. Unfortunately his main super power was being called Sid, and so he didn’t last long.
My first proper story was written age 13, which starts – ‘Sam was a dog. And like most dogs, he was a detective.’
This should have led to a promising career in canine detective fiction but at school and university I became completely distracted by theatre & comedy, which is where I then started my working life - at the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, producing plays and sketch shows, and occasionally writing them too.
I am very proud to still be a Trustee of the Pleasance Theatre, which gave me my first ever job, and every year gives hundreds of new writers, performers, producers and technicians their first break.
After that, I accidentally came up with a successful gameshow called Come and Have A Go If You Think You’re Smart Enough and moved into television. I still work in TV, developing programme ideas and occasionally being allowed to make them – including Argumental and DSF: Olivia Lee (Series 1 &2).
But deep down the thing I most wanted to do was write stories like the ones I grew up on, and after my Dad wrote his first book at the age of 60 - Salmon Fishing In The Yemen - I felt inspired. So I went on a marvellous Arvon Course at Ted Hughes’ old house in West Yorkshire. They were very encouraging – and I began to write a book.
That book eventually became The Last Wild, and I am currently writing the next installment in the story.
In between, I have just been trained as a Volunteer Reader by VRH and can’t wait to start helping children in my local London schools to enjoy books and stories like I did when I was younger.
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