Full of heart and emotion that might just bring a tear to your eye. If it doesn’t though it’s still got lightsabers and alien space dogs.
Tom Fletcher, Tom Fletcher Book Club
Light-hearted and profound
Sunday Times Book of the Week
Wholly original and exceptionally funny
The Bookseller Book of the Month
a spiky, effervescent treat, like Spielberg's ET put in a blender with a bottle of Irn-Bru.
The Financial Times
A touching tale . . . told with wild humour and panache
Telegraph
A wonderful and exciting story about friendship and appreciating what you have.
Independent
whimsical, heart-wrenching and hilarious.
Scotsman
...classic Cottrell Boyce: zany, lay-out-loud funny and with a very strong emotional heart.
INIS reading guide
This is an out-of-this world adventure that is also a heartening story about the importance of friendship and family.
The Week Junior
Sure to be a hit with young enquiring minds, this is a tale which is heart-breaking and hilarious in equal measure.
The School Librarian
Will send your imagination into orbit!
Mr Ripley's Enchanted Books Blog
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
Frank Cottrell-Boyce, Children's Laureate 2024–2026, is a multi award-winning children’s book author and screenwriter. Millions, his debut children's novel, won the CILIP Carnegie Medal. He is also the author of Chitty Chitty Bang Bang Flies Again, Cosmic, Framed, The Astounding Broccoli Boy and Runaway Robot. His books have been shortlisted for a multitude of prizes, including the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, the Whitbread Children's Fiction Award (now the Costa Book Award) and the Roald Dahl Funny Prize. Sputnik's Guide to Life on Earth was shortlisted for the 2017 CILIP Carnegie Medal and selected for the inaugural WHSmith Tom Fletcher Book Club.
Frank is a judge for the 500 Words competition and the BBC's One Show As You Write It competition. Along with Danny Boyle, he devised the Opening Ceremony for the London 2012 Olympics. He has written for the hit TV series Dr Who and was the screenwriter for the hit film Goodbye Christopher Robin.
Steven Lenton is a multi-award-winning illustrator, originally from Cheshire, now working from his studios in Brighton and London with his dog, Big Eared Bob. He has illustrated many children's books including Head Kid and The Taylor Turbochaser by David Baddiel, The Hundred And One Dalmatians adapted by Peter Bently, the Shifty McGifty and Slippery Sam series by Tracey Corderoy and the Sainsbury's Prize-winning The Nothing To See Here Hotel series written by Steven Butler. He has illustrated two World Book Day titles and regularly appears at literary festivals and live events across the UK. Steven has his own Draw-along YouTube channel, showing how to draw a range of his characters. He has also written his own picture book Princess Daisy and the Dragon and the Nincompoop Knights' and his new young fiction series Genie and Teeny. For more info visit stevenlenton.com