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Mister Creecher Chris Priestley

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: United Kingdom Bloomsbury Publishing PLC 03/10/2011Description: 400 HardbackISBN:
  • 9781408811047
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • JF PRI
Contents:
Reading age: from c 12 years
Summary: Billy is a street urchin, pickpocket and petty thief. Mister Creecher is a monstrous giant of a man who terrifies all he meets. Their relationship begins as pure convenience. But a bond swiftly develops between these two misfits as their bloody journey takes them ever northwards on the trail of their target ...Victor Frankenstein. Friendship, trust and betrayal combine to form a dangerous liaison in this moving and frightening new book from Chris Priestley.
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Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

Billy is a street urchin, pickpocket and petty thief. Mister Creecher is a monstrous giant of a man who terrifies all he meets. Their relationship begins as pure convenience. But a bond swiftly develops between these two misfits as their bloody journey takes them ever northwards on the trail of their target . . . Victor Frankenstein.

Friendship, trust and betrayal combine to form a dangerous liaison in this moving and frightening new book from Chris Priestley.

Reading age: from c 12 years

Billy is a street urchin, pickpocket and petty thief. Mister Creecher is a monstrous giant of a man who terrifies all he meets. Their relationship begins as pure convenience. But a bond swiftly develops between these two misfits as their bloody journey takes them ever northwards on the trail of their target ...Victor Frankenstein. Friendship, trust and betrayal combine to form a dangerous liaison in this moving and frightening new book from Chris Priestley.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Priestley's literary mashup of Dickens and Shelley makes for an entertaining adventure tale and potential gateway into those writers' works. Fifteen-year-old urchin and thief Billy is attacked as he loots a corpse he finds on a London street, and he's surprised when the body roars to life and saves him. His ghastly new companion introduces himself as "Creecher," and he and Billy form an uneasy partnership. In return for Creecher's protection, Billy helps spy on the mysterious Victor Frankenstein and his friend Henry Clerval. As Billy learns more about Creecher and Frankenstein, he is not only horrified at the misuse of science, but also at their callousness, something that undermines what little faith in humanity he still possesses. Priestley (the Tales of Terror series) paints a bleak picture, starting his characters in already depressing circumstances before setting them down a path with little hope. The dreariness is offset by Priestley's vivid writing, which melds its influences with strong action and horror scenes, and should intrigue readers about the future fate of the leads. Ages 12-up. (Oct.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

School Library Journal Review

Gr 5-9-Billy, 15, is a street urchin and pickpocket in 19th-century London when he meets Mister Creecher. The huge and hideous-looking man saves him from the evil Fletcher and his henchmen, who are out to get Billy. Soon the teen likes the protection and added thieving and bargaining power that come from having the powerful and terrifying Creecher by his side, and in exchange he works as a detective for him by tailing Victor Frankenstein and his Swiss colleague around London. Eventually they follow the scientist to Oxford and then toward Scotland. As the friendship between Billy and Creecher grows, readers learn of Frankenstein's promise to create a mate for Creecher, and of the troubled past of both characters. Literary allusions referencing both Shelley's Frankenstein and Dickens's Oliver Twist will be lost on middle schoolers, who should be the target audience. While boys might seem like the obvious audience gauging from the cover art, it will be girls who buy in more to the exploration of matters of the heart and the dawning realization for Billy of why a female mate is so critical to the monster's happiness. This book may have trouble finding a wide readership, but for young diehard fans of Frankenstein's reanimated creature, it might be a good fit.-Jake Pettit, Thompson Valley High School, Loveland, CO (c) Copyright 2011. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Booklist Review

Billy is used to surviving on his own. He stays clear of common thugs, pickpocketing tourists and distracted upper-class citizens, taking what he needs to survive. When he falls under the care and protection of a hulking giant of a man, Mr. Creecher, of Switzerland, he also finds himself in the mysterious fellow's employ, tailing two men, one of them named Frankenstein, who promised Mr. Creecher a bride. Billy finds himself on the adventure of a lifetime, complete with mistaken identity, true love, and, yes, monsters. Priestly's love of Shelley is evident. Here, he restores Shelley's original creature not a lurching, moaning monster but an eloquent, profoundly flawed being imbuing him with the deep desire to be loved and accepted. That's not to say this is low on action: within the first chapter, the title character is already cracking skulls and not really asking for names. However, there's something truly touching about Priestly's exploration of the utterly human need for love and the lengths we will go to get it.--Jones, Courtney Copyright 2010 Booklist

Horn Book Review

In 1818, teen pickpocket Billy thinks he's seen everything the streets of London have to offer--until the day he encounters monstrous Mr. Creecher. Soon their mutually beneficial partnership evolves into a hunt for Mr. Creecher's creator, Victor Frankenstein, who is at work on a new project. The team-up of Shelley's monster with a Dickensian-type urchin makes for an engaging literary-themed adventure. (c) Copyright 2012. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Kirkus Book Review

Looking younger than his 15 years but hardened by a life on the streets of 19th-century London, Billy accidentally befriends a monstrous man in this electrifying story set against the events of Mary Shelley's Frankenstein.Struggling to survive in Dickensian squalor, Billyorphan, thief and former chimney sweephas resorted to picking corpses' pockets. No one is as surprised as Billy when his newest target wakes and saves Billy from vicious attackers. The rescuer's frightful appearance masks an Austen-loving, French-speaking and vegetarian soul. Though perpetually repulsed by "Mister Creecher," Billy agrees to spy upon Victor Frankenstein in exchange for protection. Pursuing Frankenstein and the promise of a female companion for Creecher, the unlikely duo follows the doctor out of London and into the untamed countryside, where they encounter grave robbers, circus sideshow performers and love. Creecher is often a more sympathetic character than Billy, but both figures evolve appreciably during their journey. Priestly combines a coming-of-age story with the gloomy atmosphere, moral dilemmas and slow pacing of Shelly's classic and the grime and casual cruelty of Dickens' Oliver Twist. Observant readers may also notice allusions to monster movies and Romantic poets.By turns brooding and ghoulish, this old-fashioned gothic horror story is one lively read. (author's note) (Fiction. 12 up)]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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