Robert Swindells knows how to make readers horripilate

Daily Telegraph

Short, finely-paced chapters, action without melodrama, chill with garish theatricality . . .

Books for Keeps

A fascinating tale and genuinely frightening in places. Timing is the essence of a thriller and the brief chapters push the story forward relentlessly

Junior Bookshelf

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Simply told but missing no opportunity to turn the screw of suspense

The School Librarian

The worm was close now. So close Fliss could smell the putrid stench of its breath. Its slavering jaws gaped to engulf her...
Everyone in Elsworth knows the local legend about the monstrous worm - or dragon - that once terrorised the village. But it never really happened. Or did it? For when Fliss and her friends are chosen to re-enact the legend for the village Festival, the four who are to play the part of the worm dance as one across the ground. They are the worm. And Fliss begins to feel real fear. Somehow the worm itself is returning - with a thousand-year hunger in its belly, and a burning desire for vengeance...

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Its slavering jaws gaped to engulf her...
Everyone in Elsworth knows the local legend about the monstrous worm - or dragon - that once terrorised the village. For when Fliss and her friends are chosen to re-enact the legend for the village Festival, the four who are to play the part of the worm dance as one across the ground.
Read more
Reissue of a dramatic and gripping adventure from an award-winning author

Product details

ISBN
9780440870180
Published
2012-10-23
Publisher
Penguin Random House Children's UK; Yearling (imprint of Random House Children's Books)
Weight
139 gr
Height
197 mm
Width
130 mm
Thickness
13 mm
Age
JC, 02
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
192

Biographical note

ROBERT SWINDELLS left school at fifteen to work on a local newspaper. At seventeen, he joined the RAF for three years, then trained and worked as a teacher. Now a full-time writer, he is the author of a number of bestselling titles for the Random House children's list. In 1994 he won the Carnegie Medal for STONE COLD (Hamish Hamilton), a teenage novel about a serial killer.