Stories and Songs on today's free French CD, with The Times

2-6
THE ROARING, HOOTING, monster success of the season is Tyrannosaurus Drip (Macmillan, £10.99/offer £9.90), Julia Donaldson’s tale about a little dinosaur that hatches into the wrong family.
Drip is a peaceful, veggie-loving child whose mother drops him into a T. Rex nest. How he escapes to find his rightful tribe is told in the same joyous rhyming couplets as the author’s Gruffalo tales.
After this, Mega-Beasts by Robert Sabuda and Matthew Reinhart (Walker, £19.99/ £17.99) may seem less appealing but it’s a brilliant pop-up book, with a lively text. The highly-coloured monsters lunge, plunge, fight and take flight and although the BBC’s Walking With Beasts will give you more peace, junior boffins will have hours of fun as the sabre-toothed tiger and mammoth take pride of place.
OUP has reissued A Picture History of Britain by Clarke Hutton (£9.99/£9), a feast of postwar nostalgia, with vivid vignettes and elegant illustration, but the loveliest summer book of all is King Ocean’s Flute (Orion, £10.99/£9.90), Lucy Coats’s fairytale about a boy musician who outplays the King of the Sea. Peter Malone’s shimmering pictures of land and sea creatures make it ideal for the seaside.
So, too, is Emma Chichester Clark’s Melrose and Croc Beside the Sea (HarperCollins, £5.99/£5.69), in which the best friends prepare for the beach. The lyrical, ice-cream colours and simple story capture a child’s happiness, just as Rose Impey and Chris Mould’s hysterically funny rendition of One Man Went to Mow(Hodder, £10.99/£9.90) describes a child’s determined naughtiness when a dog buries too many things in a field.
Dorling Kindersley’s Buzz (£14.99/£13.50) is spot-on for budding naturalists, asking them to “match the parent to the child” with pictures of larvae and grubs, looking inside a locust, or an army of ants. Phobics might fall in love with Emily Gravett’s Little Mouse’s Big Book of Fears (Macmillan, £10.99/£9.90), which is funny, wise and exquisitely illustrated. Expect to reread before bedtime a hundred nights in a row.
6-10
Heather Dyer’s The Boy in the Biscuit Tin (Chicken House, £4.99/£4.75), enlivened by Peter Bailey’s drawings, is a charming caper in which three children discover a box of magic tricks that really work. Barnaby Grimes: The Curse of the Nightwolf (Doubleday, £8.99/£8.10), illustrated by Chris Riddell, is another elegant, Gothic thriller by Paul Stewart about a “tick-tock boy” who jumps from roof to roof. It has everything from swords to werewolves. More zany humour infects Angie Sage’s Physik (Bloomsbury, £12.99/£11.70), the continuing adventures of that other boy wizard, Septimus Heap, this time battling with an evil queen. My favourite adventure for younger readers is the new Joshua Doder, Grk: Operation Tortoise (Andersen, £4.99/£4.75). His hero Tim is on holiday in the Seychelles and a boy and his dog are all that can prevent the extinction of a species. The humour, narrative voice and absence of magic stuff are a delight.
Slightly older children will also love Will Gatti’s update of the Scarlet Pimpernel story, The Geek, the Greek and the Pimpernel (Orchard, £5.99/ £5.69), in which two clever kids and a subversive third one take on school bullies and an appalling headmaster. Ingenious, exciting and perfect for facing up to the end of the holidays.
8-11
Carole Wilkinson’s Dragon-keeper: Garden of the Purple Dragon (Macmillan, £8.99/ £8.10) continues the adventures of Ping, the last dragon-keeper. It is tender, funny and exciting, as she struggles to protect a baby dragon from a greedy sorcerer. A must for imaginative children aged over 8.
So, too is Sally Prue’s The Truth Sayer (OUP, £5.99/ £5.69), a thought-provoking, Pullmanesque adventure set in two worlds, our own and a priestly dictatorship that is bent on suppressing magic.
Elizabeth Laird’s Crusade (Macmillan, £10.99/£9.90), sees the battle of Acre through the eyes of Adam, who is attempting to atone for his mother who died without making a confession, death, and Salim, the Muslim apprentice to a Jewish doctor. Seriously good and sympathetic.
For girls, Alice Hoffman’s Incantation (Egmont, £5.99/ £5.69), a novel about the persecution of the Jews during the Spanish Inquisition, is heartbreaking in its description of friendship tested through tragedy. Older readers should look out for Marcus Sedgwick’s masterly account of the Russian Revolution, seen through the fictionalised eyes of the author Arthur Ransome in Blood Red, Snow White (Orion, £9.99/ £9), a doomed love story of power and passion.
11-14+
Too many film sequels disappoint, but children’s book sequels go from strength to strength. Top of my list is the fourth in Joseph Delaney’s Wardstone Chronicles, The Spook’s Battle (Bodley Head, £9.99/£9). From the opening, when the hero Tom tells how he is chased by a witch to the chilling climax when he is hunted by the Devil, who has been raised by the witches of Pendle, this is an outstandingly imaginative, well-written thriller.
Darren Shan continues his gruesome Demonata series on top form in Blood Beast (HarperCollins, £12.99/£11.70). Grubbs Grady discovers more about his family curse on a nightmare ride to Hell. Children of 12+ should lap it up.
Also for 12+, Matt Haig’s Shadow Forest(Bodley Head, £9.99/£9), weaves horror and humour into a terrific tale about an orphaned brother and sister who go to live with an unprepossessing aunt on the edge of a sinister, troll-infested forest.
There are more siblings looking out for each other in the latest of Anthony Horowitz’s Power of Five series, Nightrise (Walker, £6.99/£6.65), which is even longer, twistier and more hair-raising than before. A psychic twin is kidnapped, leaving his weaker sibling to trace him to prison and prevent a presidential assassination.
Institutional cruelty is a strong feature of Ally Kennen’s Berserk (Marian Lloyd, £6.99/£6.65), a horribly funny thriller about a boy with a bad best friend – and a psychotic penfriend released from Death Row.
Conspiracy by adults against children is the theme of Steve Voake’s The Starlight Conspiracy (Faber, £12.99/£11.70), in which a traveller girl is given a mysterious bracelet made by aliens. It endows her with magical powers, and sets some murderous men on her trail as she is chased from Glastonbury to America in a thoroughly enjoyable adventure for devotees of Doctor Who. There is more to summer than Harry Potter. Try these, and see.
Audiobooks
THE FASHION FOR fantastical trilogies is providing some first-rate audiobooks. For younger listeners, Dugald A. Steer’s The Dragon’s Eye(Orion, CDs, £12.99/offer £13.29) is the first instalment of the Dragonology Chronicles,which adds narrative adventures to Dragonology, Steer’s hugely popular encyclopaedia of dragon lore. The narrator, Dan Stevens, reads with such conviction and spirit that he makes it almost believable.
Older children will relish The Golem’s Eye (Random House, unabridged, CDs, £18.99/£18.19), the second part of Jonathan Stroud’s Bartimaeus Trilogy. Read, as was The Amulet of Samarkand, by Stephen Pacey, it finds our hero Nathaniel becoming increasingly unpleasant as he enters the corrupt world of politics (cue some neat satire on the Blair government style).
Classic children’s stories offer listening that parents will enjoy too. Rudyard Kipling’s Just-So Stories (Naxos, CDs, £13.99/£13.29) are made quite irresistible thanks to Geoffrey Palmer’s rendition of How the Whale Got his Throat, thanks to a Mariner “of infinite resource and sagacity”, How the Elephant got his Trunkthrough the Elephant Child’s “satiable curiosity” and all the rest.
Finally, Gabriel Woolf’s excellent abridgements of Arthur Ransome’s 12 books are being issued on CD and cassette. The latest is Great Northern? (CDs, £13.50 from www.swallows-and-amazons.com).
Celebrity Choice: Francesca Simon, Horrid Henry author
A WRINKLE IN TIME, by Madeleine L’Engle is an American classic that is, bizarrely, almost unknown here. One of my all-time favourites, it’s about Meg, a clever, weird, lonely girl, who goes on a quest across space to find her missing father, with her “faults” to help her. Francesca Simon’s A Hat Trick of Horrid Henry will be published by Orion on July 5 at £8.99
Reader choice: I shall be reading THE CHILDREN OF HÚRIN by J. R. R. Tolkien. I am escaping to Middle-earth to lose myself in a world of fantasy. Jean Marshall, Bushey, Herts
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