Showing posts with label Tom Huddleston. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tom Huddleston. Show all posts

Friday, 13 March 2020

ReadItDaddy's Chapter Book of the Week - Week Ending 13th March 2020: "DustRoad" by Tom Huddleston (Nosy Crow)

We're beginning to wonder whether anyone else will get a look-in in our Chapter Book of the Week slot, as once again Nosy Crow prove that they have a steely glint in their eye for publishing some of the most scintillating middle grade / YA fiction on the planet.

"DustRoad" by Tom Huddleston is one of those books that we cleared the decks for, in fact the same thing happened with "FloodWorld" (Book one in Tom's fantastic post-apocalyptic climate crisis series) - and once again we were wrapped up in the dying world of Kara and Joe.

This time the action eventually sees the duo back on dry land, but still very much in the thick of things as opposing forces - The Five and The Mariners - begin to duke it out over their own visions for the planet's future.

As the action switches to a sun-baked version of the US, like all good dystopic fiction you instantly feel like you're in a world that feels like it's depicting our own future, maybe less than a decade away (unless of course there's a near-miraculous turnaround in the way people think).

Kara and Joe's quest continues as they once again evade Cortez's nefarious Mariners, finding dubious comradeship with a band of outlaws who are determined to make the ruins of planet earth their own.

Kara and Joe, and the villainous Captain Cortez are the sort of characters that stick in the mind long after you've polished off the last chapter - and without any hint of spoilers, leave you almost gnawing the book in half to find out what's going to happen next (cliffhanger much?)

Do they have a future? Are the battle lines as clear cut as good vs evil? What Tom depics so well here is that these are characters that feel believable. In fact they feel like ordinary everyday folk facing up to the reality of a world being dragged through irrevocable change, and dang, if there's ever a reason we're addicted to dystopian stories, it's to wonder (and worry) about how we ourselves would cope in Kara and Joe's well-worn shoes.

But ah, the other character in the book - the amazing sun-blasted ruined world, described in meticulous, mesmerising and horrifying detail - is the real star. There's a hideous beauty to the way Tom describes some of the more memorable locations in the story (again if you read the influences article, you'll recognise some of these). Again this is like a siren song to both of us, fans of "Urbex" (a movement to photograph and capture the atmosphere of long-abandoned or ruined places, that feels like something Tom has nodded to in several parts of the book where previous bustling examples of civilisation are reduced to skeletal rotting ruins).

We both loved this. C because, to her, this sort of thing is all new - moving swiftly on from the usual middle grade fare into books that are far more dark and gritty than other things she's previously read. Books that feed into her own interest in climate change and the youth resistance movement that has risen up to challenge our horribly unsustainable consumer-led lifestyles.

For me, it feels like Tom Huddleston deserves to join the ranks of hallowed authors I loved as a kid and still love re-reading as an adult. Authors like John Christopher and John Wyndham, Harlan Ellison and Robert Silverberg and even modern dystopia masters like Ben H. Winters and Margaret Atwood.

I'm gushing, of course I am. This is a bloomin' fantastic book, tinged with a dark hearted view of a possible (some might say 'inevitable') future, but with moments that offer a tiny silver-hued glimmer of hope that humanity will somehow prevail.

Tom very kindly wrote about some of the influences for his books (click here for a rivetting read!) and after devouring this book in a couple of marathon sessions (it's that good), all those influences are clearly identifiable in this fast-paced story that keeps you reading way into the wee small hours.

Sum this book up in a sentence: Another truly amazing, rivetting and addictive slice of dystopian fiction from an author who is fast becoming the 'go-to' for darkly tinged and utterly essential middle grade sci fi.

"DustRoad" by Tom Huddleston is out now, published by Nosy Crow (Kindly supplied for review). 


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Wednesday, 11 March 2020

A fantastic guest blog from Tom Huddleston - Author of "FloodWorld" and "DustRoad" with five things that inspired the FloodWorld series



FloodWorld and Dust Road by Tom Huddleston (published by Nosy Crow)
It's not often we let anyone else wrestle the controls of the good ship "ReadItDaddy" off us, but we're prepared to make exceptions for folk whose books completely blow us away. So step forward Tom Huddleston, author of the truly stunning "FloodWorld" (which was a previous Book of the Week on this very blog) and the sequel "DustRoad" - once again putting fantastic, gripping post-apocalyptic storytelling firmly back on the map.

Tom is here to talk about five things that directly inspired the "Floodworld" series, so without further ado, let's get under way! Take it away, Tom!


Five Things That Inspired the FloodWorld Series

My action-adventure story FloodWorld and its sequel DustRoad are set far in the future, after climate change has caused the oceans to rise, drowning the world’s great cities. The story was influenced by countless books and stories that I’ve enjoyed over the years - but I had lots of other inspirations, too.

Here’s a list of five less obvious things - from photos and songs to holidays and school strikes - that had a big impact on the writing of FloodWorld and DustRoad.


The place



I’m lucky enough to have an aunt who lives in Venice, which means I can take a low-cost trip whenever I want to one of the most extraordinary cities on earth.

The waterways of Venice were a huge influence on the sunken suburbs of London in FloodWorld - all the noise and activity and colour. Because Venice may be a tourist destination but it’s also a working city - you see police boats and ambulance boats, skiffs loaded with crates for delivery or piled up with rubbish. Spending time there made the world I was imagining feel much more real.

The event






When I was working on the later drafts of FloodWorld, kids across the world started walking out of school in protest against government inaction on climate change. I grew up in a family where protesting was the norm - we marched against nuclear weapons, inequality and the poll tax. So I found the school strikes really inspiring - they gave me new determination to make FloodWorld as good as it could be, to offer a clear vision of what could happen to the world if we don’t pay attention.


The song


The closest thing to a villain in the FloodWorld books is John Cortez, a Mariner pirate captain who believes that his vision for the world is the only right way for humanity. For the first few drafts of the book, Cortez was named Lars Olson - which, I gradually realised, is a rubbish name for a bad guy. The song Cortez the Killer by Neil Young is actually about the brutal Spanish conquistador Herman Cortez, but the mood is so grand and oceanic, and the opening lines fit so perfectly with FloodWorld, that I decided to steal the name:


‘He came dancing across the water,


With his galleons and guns.


Looking for the new world…’



The road trip




I’ve always loved travelling in America, and a few years ago I took a coast-to-coast road trip from Houston to Los Angeles with my partner Rosie and our friend Tom, across the deserts of West Texas, past the Painted Desert and the Grand Canyon to California.

When I came to write DustRoad I drew on the memory of that trip, weaving many of the real places that we visited - Johnson Space Centre, the VLA radio telescope, the shores of the Salton Sea - into the story I was telling. DustRoad takes place centuries from now, but it’s built on real experiences.


The photograph



This image comes from a 2016 documentary film called Homo Sapiens, which imagines a world after humanity has gone extinct. I must admit that I haven’t even seen the film, but I saw this image online and it really sparked my imagination - so much so that I put a sunken rollercoaster into DustRoad.

I’ve always loved ruined, rusted places, they’re haunting and strange and exciting all at the same time. That’s how I feel when I look at this picture.

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Truly fascinating stuff from Tom and these images are amazing. Thank you so much for joining us on the blog today. Look out for our review of "DustRoad" coming up on the blog soon. VERY soon.

"FloodWorld" and "DustRoad" by Tom Huddleston are both available now, published by Nosy Crow (kindly supplied for review). 

Don't forget to check out all the other awesome folk joining in with this blog tour!



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Friday, 27 September 2019

ReadItDaddy's Chapter Book of the Week - Week Ending 27th September 2019: "Flood World" by Tom Huddleston (Nosy Crow)

Our Chapter Book of the Week feels like a glimpse into what's fast becoming our near future - a drowned planet where most of our current major cities are underwater.

I've always been drawn to dystopic stories, and "Flood World" by Tom Huddleston is one of the best middle grade dystopia novels I've read in a long time - so good in fact that even C (who usually goes for books with slightly happier / funnier settings) couldn't resist its lure either.

We both polished this one off in a couple of sittings, so let's get to the nitty gritty of what makes this such a mesmerising book.

As we've already said, this is a post-apocalyptic world where the ice caps have finally melted and the oceans have risen to cover most of the land masses on the planet.

Kara and Joe somehow scratch out a meagre existence in this drowned world, navigating the perilous waterways of a sunken city in search of food and other salvage. 

When the two plucky youngsters gain posession of a mysterious map, their world changes beyond all recognition. Suddenly Kara and Joe are targets for ruthless gangsters who rule the flooded cities, for corrupt cops who want a slice of the action for themselves, and for terrifying pirates who use their hi-tech submarines to roam the seas in search of easy pickings. 

The map holds a secret that Kara and Joe must uncover, before their entire world comes crumbling down. Can they triumph against such overwhelming odds? 

Kids who are following the current ecological crisis will wholly identify with the struggles of Kara and Joe, seemingly pitted against ruthless (but largely dim-witted) adults - yep, all very allegorical of the climate crisis that so many kids are devoting their time to protesting against.

Tom expertly draws up a drowned planet and characters that feel as brave, as vulnerable and as inspirational as young Greta Thunberg herself. There's something unsettlingly intoxicating and enticing about books that depict what could be (and the way things are going, what is very likely to be).  

Sum this book up in a sentence: Beautifully written, fantastically timely, and utterly addictive. We cannot recommend this one highly enough. 

"Flood World" by Tom Huddleston is out on 3rd October 2019, published by Nosy Crow (kindly supplied for review). 
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