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Olivia

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BfK No. 105 - July 1997

Cover Story
This issue’s cover is from the gift edition of Roald Dahl’s Charlie and the Chocolate Factory illustrated by Quentin Blake and with design and typography by Peter Campbell. The successful collaboration between Roald Dahl and Quentin Blake has played an important part in the popularity of Dahl’s work over the last fifteen years. Blake’s unmistakable artwork truly complements Dahl’s writing. His economical, amiable, illustrative style balances out Dahl’s often expansive language. And the liveliness, humour and pathos of the drawings offer a softer side to Dahl’s sometimes gloriously grotesque, sometimes cruel descriptions of his characters.

Thanks to Penguin Children’s Books for their help in producing this July cover which commemorates the thirty years anniversary of Charlie and the Chocolate Factory’s first UK publication.

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Olivia

Rosie Rushton
(Piccadilly Press Ltd)
176pp, 978-1853404160, RRP £9.99, Hardcover
10-14 Middle/Secondary
Buy "Olivia (The girls)" on Amazon

Rushton charts a sure course through the minefield of teenage angst: Olivia is her eighth book to be published by Piccadilly. Frustratingly, the book's cover leans towards caricature and is wholly at odds with the perceptive writing within. Olivia's parents have separated: unable to hate her father's girlfriend and unsure of her status within the family, she falls in love with Ryan. Here the plot loses credibility, since he is revealed as her half-brother. Laying incredulity aside, I can only admire Rushton's insights into the emotional maelstrom of teenage life. She has observed her subjects well and produced an entertaining story allied to a good deal of sound, practical advice.

Reviewer: 
Val Randall
3
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