Sunday, May 11, 2014

How to Catch a Bogle, Catherine Jinks

I haven't read any middle-grade fiction recently, so I snagged this one off of a recommended reads list, and I'm glad I did.


How to Catch a Bogle
Catherine Jinks (author of Saving Thanehaven, which I also enjoyed)
ISBN: 9780544087088
Read May 9, 2014
Juvenile/Middle-Grade alternate Victorian London; urchins and magical creatures

This one goes right along that same alley as Kieran Larwood's Freaks, Y.S. Lee's Agency series, or for a more gritty "literary" take, Berlie Doherty's Street Child.  Birdie is an orphan, but she's better off than most.  Unlike the mudlarks digging in the filthy and dangerous Thames for shillings'worth of scraps, or the professional beggars getting rousted by the police, or the ragged street-thieves risking prison-time, or even the poor unfortunate souls getting used and abused at the workhouse, Birdie is a Bogler's Apprentice, and that gets her a good day's work, extra spending money (sometimes) and what's most important - a degree of respect in this hard-knock world.

And what's a Bogler's Apprentice?  She works with the Bogler, to lure out and kill bogles.  These nasty slimy dark nightmares like nothing more than a tasty child to eat, and only Alfred and Birdie can find them, lure them in, and destroy them.

Birdie loves her life, loves her job, and loves being important and needed.  She very resolutely does not think about how dangerous her job is, but Alfred does.  (Making this obvious is a very nice grace-note in the story.)  It doesn't matter how dangerous it is, there's no real alternative for Birdie in the slums she calls home.  Until the duo meets an eccentric armchair naturalist, who follows them out on a bogle hunt, and is promptly scandalized and terrified.  Miss Eames is determined to save Birdie from her most likely fate as bogle food, but Birdie is equally stubborn.

The book jacket and the press indicate that this is the first of a trilogy, and I'm deeply satisfied with how they did it, because this is a totally complete story - none of this cliffhanger nonsense.

Parts of this are pretty creepy in the "things sneaking up behind you" sort of way.  Otherwise, it's a delightful romp through the poor muckridden slums of London, with a totally accurate (and colorful) vocabulary.

An excellent read, and I'm looking forward to A Plague of Bogles, out in January.





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