<p>"Will grip young readers from start to finish, and make them think about their own place in the world" – LoveReading4Kids</p>
<p>"A good, pacy read with illustrations to help it along and support understanding. It’s perfect for an older reader who really needs a decent gripping story but might be overwhelmed by too chunky a text" – Books for Keeps</p>

Seth must look death in the face in this thrilling conclusion to the Defenders trilogy, featuring Iron Age drama with a sporty twist.

A tense Seth is waiting to hear if his mum's got the 'all-clear'. But instead of relaxing in Cornwall, Seth is haunted by visions. Heads on spikes – bloodied and rotten, eyes pecked out – surrounding an Iron Age hill fort to keep intruders away. When Seth meets two football-crazy brothers from Aleppo their stories offer him a new sense of courage. Can he look death in the face and restore calm to the present?

Read more

Seth must look death in the face in this thrilling conclusion to the Defenders trilogy, featuring Iron Age drama with a sporty twist.

My name is Seth. I can see into the past. And I can feel the horror.

Seth and his mum have escaped to a Cornish seaside town. But life there is unsettled by the ebb and flow of people from the past – and the present.

An Iron Age hill fort haunts Seth with brutal visions. He sees rotten heads on
stakes, war-torn travellers seeking refuge, incomers cowed by fear …

Can Seth find the courage to settle past hostilities and create hope for the future?

Read more

(Dyslexia-friendly)

(Dyslexia-friendly)

Preview

Product details

ISBN
9781781127315
Published
2017-11-07
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Weight
120 gr
Height
198 mm
Width
130 mm
Thickness
12 mm
Age
J, 02
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Number of pages
128

Author
Illustrated by

Biographical note

Tom Palmer was a reluctant reader as a child and credits articles about football with getting him into reading. He is now the multi-award-winning author of many books for young readers, including the Young Quills Award winner After the War and FCBG Children’s Book Award winners Armistice Runner and D-Day Dog. In 2019 Tom was awarded the National Literacy Trust’s Ruth Rendell Award in recognition of his significant contribution to literacy work in the UK.