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The Fire Cats of London

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Deaths from the pestilence had already started to ebb, and new infections were declining by September 1666. Just this week Mrs H sent me 3 new books to read. These are by David Michie, the famed author assistant to the the Dalai Lama’s cat, respectfully announced as HHC (His Holiness’s Cat). I have duly set to reading these fine accounts and can honestly say they are highly amusing, and quite insightful as to Buddhism and how it affects our everyday feline (and human) lives. So, if you can hear Buddhist monks chanting in the palace grounds, you’d be right, as I’ve got them in to improve the soil karma and productivity of the rose beds! So, without further ado, it is our pleasure to present, The Fire Cats of London by the hugely talented Anna Fargher! The author's note in the rear of the book gives some information about real wild cats in Britain and the decline of so many other species. Details of the real life people she based some of her characters on is also interesting as well other facts and figures from this terrible time in London's history.

Townsperson: I’ve heard that more than 300 houses have been burned by a fire, Sir, and it’s still going. Asta and her brother Ash love living in the forest with their mum. She is teaching them how to catch their prey when they are caught instead. All the houses in London were so close together, which is a very good thing for escaping…But it also helped the fire to spread. Sold to an ruthless apothecary who uses their whiskers and blood for his many concoctions to sell as medicine, Asta is desperate to escape her cage. There is already another cat (Beauty) living with the apothecary and it slowly causes a rift between Asta and Ash. Ash begins to believe all Beauty's lies, and decides is quite happy to stay in the house and give up the wild, but Asta refuses to be tamed. One of the many joys of this blog, in fact the main joy, is sharing adventures and things that we like and read. When it comes to books, there are so many fine examples out there, it is incredibly hard to choose what to read first. In fact the palace bookshelves are rapidly filling up and I am thinking I may have to comandeer the fridge for Mrs H’s collection of spine tingling chillers, sorry, thrillers!The Great Fire of London is the most infamous fire in British history. Studied in schools from KS1, you’re probably aware of the devastation it caused to many beautiful buildings and how it changed the city of London forever. However, there’s a lot of misinformation out there. Read on for Six things you might not know about the Great Fire of London She is sold again, this time to something even worse, having to fight for her life every day in a betting ring, surrounded by cruel and merciless humans, both men and women. All she can think about though is returning to free her brother, no matter what he believes about his new life.

Based on true accounts, this will undoubtedly appeal to fans of Anna’s ‘ The Umbrella Mouse’ series. Comparable authors might be Michael Morpurgo and Emma Carroll. SINGS) Something’s burning, something’s burning. Fetch the ketchup, fetch the ketchup… BBQ! BBQ! It’s burnt and it’s crispy.Before ovens were invented all food had to be cooked on fires. Anna Fargher was raised in a creative hub on the Suffolk coast by an artist and a ballet teacher. She read English Literature at Goldsmiths before working in the British art world and opening her own gallery. The Umbrella Mouse is her first book, which she wrote on her iPhone notepad during her daily commute on the London Underground. She splits her time between London and Suffolk where she is often found exploring the coastline and marshlands under the huge East Anglian skies. The Umbrella Mouse was selected for the Waterstones Book of the Month.

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S am Usher graduated from the University of West England and his debut picture book Can You See Sassoon? was shortlisted for the Waterstones Prize and the Red House Children’s Book Award. He is particularly admired for his technical drawing skill and prowess with watercolour. Also a talented pianist, when he’s not holding a pen and wobbling at paper you’ll find him perfecting a fiendishly difficult piece of Chopin. I can’t say much more than this, but suffice to say that the story weaves its way skillfully through the events up to and during the Great Fire of London.

Asta however is a character to cheer for as she does everything to survive and then help other animals. Three brave humans helping free animals from their cages is heartening but frightening too as they are incredible danger every time they try to save an animal. Famously, only six people are recorded as dying in the fire. The truth is that most of those who died were poor, working, or lower-middle-class making it almost impossible to know how many people actually died. Young wildcats, Asta and Ash, find themselves captured and taken from their home in the forest to an apothecary’s shop in the heart of London in the summer of 1666, when fear and superstition are rife. Asta’s determination to escape, leads them to Miriam, a healer with a soft spot for animals. Treated by the people of London as a witch, no one will listen to Miriam when she tries to warn them that something terrible is about to happen. So when Asta and Ash overhear a dangerous plot to destroy London, they embark on a perilous race against time to clear Miriam’s name before the flames are let loose on the city. Yes. We have given basic plot outline and it is necessary to mention some aspects of the plot. See also my cautionary note at end of this review.Townspeople: Fire! Fire! We need to tell somebody about this… I wish someone would invent the telephone. And the fire brigade.Let’s get The Lord Mayor. Two comets appeared in 1664 and 1665 and were interpreted as harbingers of The Great Plague and The Great Fire respectively. People were also nervous that the biblical number 666 in 1666 indicated evil was brewing. Samuel Pepys wrote: ‘For the whole year, the population of London had a great sense of foreboding, because the year had the number of the devil in it – 666.’ The artwork for this story, which appears throughout, is terrific and fun. I think it certainly adds to the whole feel and acts to temper the story for the younger reader.

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