About the Author Holly Webb has written over 100 books, including the ANIMAL STORIES, MY NAUGHTY LITTLE PUPPY and MAISIE HITCHINS series for Stripes Publishing. Holly has also written THE CLEVER LITTLE KITTEN for World Book Day and recently penned a sequel to THE SECRET GARDEN. She lives with her husband, three sons and three cats in Tilehurst, Berkshire. Visit www.holly-webb.com
K**Y
Delightful
This is a delightful Holly Webb book; the second in the 'Hounds of Penhallow Hall" set.It picks up where book one left off: with Polly and Rex getting to meet two of the other ghost hounds, and enjoying an exciting adventure along the way.It's well written and easy enough for school years 3-4 to read themselves; whilst still being an engaging read for adults to enjoy too.My daughter and I are hoping a third instalment!
K**R
Four Stars
Good
D**W
Wonderfully written, mystery, adventure, with a little bit of a (not very scary) ghost story - highly recommended
'The Lost Treasure' is the second in The Hounds of Penhallow series and it's a lovely story about Polly, a little girl who lives with her mother at historic Penhallow Hall. Her mother has a job as caretaker and Polly has free run of the whole estate. She has no human friends yet as her little family has only recently moved to Penhallow Hall but in the previous book she befriended some of the ghosts of Penhallow Hall. Her best friend is a ghost dog called Rex and there's also a little boy William, who is the ghost of a young man who died in the first World War. In 'The Lost Treasure', Polly and Rex discover that a lot of the statues around Penhallow Hall have ghosts who are closer to the surface now and could be woken. They waken a little Pekinese dog who has been living in one of the Chinese statues and they discover a mystery. Li-Mei was one of two Pekinese and the other dog, Han, vanished without a trace and Li-Mei never knew what happened to him. There is also the mystery of the Green Lady, a ghost that haunted the shoreline and surrounds of Penhallow Hall, and the mystery of one of a pair of statues that is missing. Polly and Rex and the crew must find out what happened to Han, the statue, and who the ghostly Green Lady was.Like the others in this series, this book is a little bit of history with a little bit of a ghost story mixed in with the universal story of a child trying to find her place in the world after a traumatic event and a sudden relocation. It's sweet rather than scary and the relationships that Polly has with the ghosts, particularly with Rex, are comforting and warm. The writing is powerful and evocative and, as in 'The Storm Dog', the only other book of Holly Webb's that I've read so far, she really connects to a deep sense of place in her writing.My only issue with this story is that, as in 'The Storm Dog', the story finishes a bit too soon and we don't get to see how the interesting events of the climax really play out in the life of Polly and Penhallow Hall. That's a bit of a disappointment as part of the joy of a story is to relax with all the participants for the epilogue at the end but it's not a big enough disappointment to make me stop reading these books. Holly Webb is a very good writer and I really like her work.Highly recommended for young readers.
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