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The Longest Night of Charlie Noon

by Christopher Edge

"Originally published in the United Kingdom in paperback and in slightly different form by Nosy Crow, London, in 2019"--Copyright page.

FORMAT
Hardcover
LANGUAGE
English
CONDITION
Brand New


Publisher Description

This heart-pounding mystery-adventure follows three kids who get lost in the woods at night and experience something they cannot quite explain.

Secrets, spies, or maybe even a monster . . . what lies in the heart of the woods? Charlie Noon and Dizzy Heron are determined to find out. When their nemesis, Johnny Baines, plays a prank on them and night falls without warning, all three end up lost in the woods, trapped in a nightmare. Unforeseen dangers and impossible puzzles lurk in the shadows. Like it or not, Charlie and Dizzy must work with Johnny if they are to find a way out. But time can be tricky. . . . What if the night never ends?

Author Biography

Christopher Edge grew up in Manchester, England, where he spent most of his childhood in the local library, dreaming up stories. He now lives in Gloucestershire, where he spends most of his time in the local library, dreaming up stories. His novel The Many Worlds of Albie Bright was named a Best Children's Book by the New York Public Library and nominated for the prestigious CILIP Carnegie Medal in the UK, as were The Jamie Drake Equation and The Infinite Lives of Maisie Day. Visit Christopher online at christopheredge.co.uk and on Facebook and follow him on Twitter.

Review

"Once the action starts, it accelerates until the very end. Readers will find it difficult to put down this imaginative book. —School Library Journal, starred review

"A gripping, thought-provoking adventure to read and discuss." —Kirkus Reviews, starred review

"Edge plays with time as a construct . . .themes of friendship and individual choice prevail, and code cracking provides an extra hook for inquisitive minds." —Booklist

"In addition to the brain-teasing puzzles, this novel offers an introspective take on the passage of time and the impact of huge world events on a personal level." —The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books





Review Quote

Praise for Christopher Edge middle-grade novels . . . The Many Worlds of Albie Bright "Reader's will be captivated by Albie's adventures in parallel versions of his own life and intrigued by the science behind his travels." -- School Library Journal The Jamie Drake Equation "Jamie's first-person narrative will draw readers into the story and surprise them with twists along the way as its space-age realism bends toward science fiction." -- Booklist The Infinite Lives of Maisie Day "A suspenseful yet poignant science fiction novel that deftly weaves scientific theories with the equally complex relationship between two very different sisters." -- School Library Journal, Starred Review

Excerpt from Book

1 Johnny Baines says there''s a monster in here. Dizzy thinks it might be a spy. But as I scramble up the grassy bank of bluebells at the edge of the woods, it''s hard to believe there could be anything bad here at all. Sunlight filters through the trees, bathing the grassy path ahead in shifting patterns of brightness. The faint breeze whispering through the leaves makes their shadows flicker like ripples on an imaginary river that''s following the path through the woods. Dizzy''s already striding along, his hiccupping walk making it look like he''s forever on the verge of falling over. "It''s this way, Charlie," he says, glancing back to beckon me on. "That''s where I saw the first one." I nod, but I''m in no real hurry to catch up with Dizzy yet. This is the first time I''ve been into the woods, and for a moment, I stand absolutely still, slowly filling my senses with this place. From the back of our school the woods look close enough to touch, a solid bank of forest green that fills half of the horizon. When we set off I thought it would only take us ten minutes to get here, but I hadn''t reckoned on the strange zigzagging path that Dizzy took, following the edges of the fields that lie between the village and the woods. Most of the time we didn''t even seem to be walking in the right direction, turning right, then left, then right again, before taking a long detour around the farmhouse that marks the halfway point between the village and the trees. But when I asked Dizzy why we couldn''t just walk in a straight line, pointing out the farm track that led to the corner of the woods, he shot me an anxious look. "You''ve not met Mr. Jukes, who owns the farm, have you?" I shook my head. We only moved here from London a couple of months ago. It all happened so fast. Dad lost his job and then Granddad Noon died, leaving us his house in his will. That''s when Mum and Dad decided to escape from the city and move back to this tiny village where Dad grew up. I didn''t get a say. I just had to do what I was told. I used to have friends in London, but now all I''ve got is Dizzy. "He''ll fetch the police if he catches you trespassing on his land," Dizzy warned me, casting a nervous glance in the direction of Jukes''s farm. "Or set his dog on you." From behind the long barn came the sound of an angry bark. That was all I needed to hear to make me hurry up. I didn''t want to get bitten by some mangy farm animal. I''d probably catch rabies and die. The one thing I''ve learned since we moved here is that the countryside''s full of germs. So when we finally reached the edge of the woods, scrambling up the bank and out of sight of the farm, I breathed a sigh of relief. I say a sigh of relief, but it was actually more of a gasp, as the walk had left me completely out of breath. All week the weather''s been blazing hot, but this is the hottest day yet. It''s not even June, but on the news they said if the summer carries on like this, it''ll be the hottest since record keeping began. All I want to do is stop and catch my breath, but Dizzy is still striding ahead. "Come on," he calls out again. Dizzy isn''t Dizzy''s real name, by the way. It''s actually Dylan, but everyone calls him Dizzy, even our teacher, Miss James. She says it''s because he''s got a headful of sky, always staring out the classroom window as he watches the birds fly by. But right now Dizzy''s gaze is fixed firmly to the ground as his lolloping walk takes him deeper into the woods. Not wanting to be left behind, I hurry to catch up. Trees line the sun-dappled path like sentries, their serried ranks stretching as far as my eye can see. Between the broad trunks I glimpse snatches of purple, white and yellow from the waves of wildflowers that carpet the woodland floor. The air feels warm under the overhanging branches, and the mossy grass puts a spring in my step as I finally catch up with Dizzy. "So what exactly are we looking for?" I ask. "A sign," Dizzy replies, glancing up from the path. "Just like I told you I saw." Dizzy comes to the woods every day after school. He says he''s got this special place where he sits to sketch the birds that nest here. Before we moved to the countryside the only birds I ever saw were the pigeons in the park. Flying rats, Dad called them. But the back of Dizzy''s schoolbook is filled with drawings of more birds than I even knew there were. Woodpeckers, willow warblers, blackcaps and song thrushes. Dizzy''s teaching me their names, pointing them out when they flit overhead as we sit at the edge of the school field. That was where we were today when he told me what he''d found in the woods. The rest of the class were playing rounders, and I was supposed to be keeping deep field, but I''d gotten bored because nobody was hitting the ball in my direction, so I''d sat down on the grass next to Dizzy. Dizzy doesn''t have to play games because he caught polio when he was little and it made one of his legs shorter than the other. This means Miss James just lets him sit and watch us play, but he spends most of his time drawing birds instead. That''s what he was doing when I sat down next to him. "What are you drawing?" I asked. "Shhh," Dizzy replied, motioning with his pencil toward the fence at the end of the field. Following the direction of his pencil tip, I looked up to see a plump reddish-brown bird perched on the fence''s top rung. "What is it?" "Shhh!" Dizzy whispered again, frowning as he put his pencil to the page. "It''s a nightingale." Keeping my mouth shut, I watched as Dizzy drew, his pencil strokes bringing the bird to life on the page of his exercise book: the thin curve of its beak, the black bead of its eye, the scaly lines of the feathers on its wings kept folded close to its side. It was as though Dizzy could see the shape of the nightingale hidden on the page and was just tracing this invisible outline. And then the nightingale sang. It opened its beak wide, and a rich stream of whistles and trills burst out into the sky. I stared at the nightingale, astonished. Another flurry of notes rang out from its beak, even faster than the first--this liquid melody quickly rising to a crescendo. Then the nightingale fell silent, its head bobbing from side to side as if the bird was searching for a reply. But all I could hear was the scratching of Dizzy''s pencil. I glanced down at his drawing of the bird, the nightingale now still on the page, but when I looked up again all I saw was a sudden blur of movement, the real nightingale''s wings beating against the sky as it wheeled toward the woods. Dizzy lifted his face to the sun as he watched the nightingale soar. As it disappeared into the green of the trees, he turned toward me. "I found something in the woods last night." Even though the nightingale had flown, Dizzy kept his voice low, as if confiding a secret. From the other end of the field came a distant chorus of "Catch it!" followed by a ragged cheer, and I had to shuffle closer to hear exactly what Dizzy said next. "I think it might''ve been left by a spy." As soon as Dizzy mentioned the word "spy," a picture jumped into my head of the books Dad used to keep on a shelf in the hallway of our old house: The Secret Agent, The Riddle of the Sands, The Thirty-Nine Steps and The Valley of Fear. I don''t have any books of my own, so I used to sneak those stories off the shelf when Dad wasn''t looking and take them up to my room. Then, when I was supposed to be asleep, I''d bury my head under the covers to read them with a flashlight, taking shelter in their tales of foreign spies and sinister crimes as I tried to ignore the angry words thudding through the walls as Mum and Dad argued downstairs. "What did you find?" I asked Dizzy, my brain already filling with thoughts of secret documents and stolen gold. Closing his exercise book, Dizzy looked at me solemnly. "Sticks," he said, "on the path through the woods." I couldn''t stop myself from laughing. "Dizzy--it''s the woods. Of course there''re sticks dropped on the path. What''s so strange about that?" Dizzy''s cheeks seemed to darken slightly, his light-brown skin taking on a coppery hue. "These sticks weren''t dropped," he said, stuffing his exercise book back inside his school bag. "They were arranged." "What do you mean ''arranged''?" I asked, still puzzled as to why Dizzy thought a spy was leaving sticks in the woods. "They were laid out in patterns," Dizzy replied, pushing his school bag to one side. "Some pointing like arrows, others arranged into squares, like a sign. I couldn''t help but notice them. Every stick looked exactly the same--all smooth and white--with the bark stripped off each one. The patterns they made looked like some kind of secret code, just like a spy would use." That got my attention. Since we moved into Granddad''s old house, the only book I''ve found to read is one that was left on the shelf in my new bedroom. It''s called Scouting for Boys and I think it used to belong to my dad. It''s all about the skills you need to be a Boy Scout, like making fires and following tracks. In it, there''s this story about how some soldiers left secret messages near landmarks like trees to keep them hidden from the enemy. Maybe that''s what Dizzy has found. "Where exactly did you see this?" I asked. "If we went into the woods after school I could show you," Dizzy sa

Details

ISBN0593173082
Author Christopher Edge
Pages 176
Audience Age 9-12
Language English
Year 2020
ISBN-10 0593173082
ISBN-13 9780593173084
Format Hardcover
Publication Date 2020-08-04
Country of Publication United States
Illustrations Illustrations, unspecified
AU Release Date 2020-08-04
NZ Release Date 2020-08-04
US Release Date 2020-08-04
UK Release Date 2020-08-04
Publisher Random House USA Inc
Place of Publication New York
Imprint Delacorte Press
DEWEY FIC
Audience Children / Juvenile

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