English language

Published Dec. 28, 2013 by Jo Fletcher.

ISBN:
978-1-78087-009-0
Copied ISBN!
OCLC Number:
827951909

View on OpenLibrary

5 stars (2 reviews)

Expelled from school, betrayed by her best friend, and virtually ignored by her widowed father, Beth Bradley is introduced to the magic and wonder of a hidden London by Filius Viae, then helps him protect it from Reach, a malign god of demolition who wants to claim the skyscraper throne for himself.

6 editions

reviewed The city's son by Tom Pollock (The skyscraper throne -- bk. 1)

Review of "The city's son" on 'Goodreads'

4 stars

The down side of this is that by now you've probably read a bunch of magical London stories.

The up side is that the vision of this one is not necessarily what you're used to reading.

http://fedpeaches.blogspot.com/2016/03/not-just-another-magical-london-story.html

reviewed The city's son by Tom Pollock (The skyscraper throne -- bk. 1)

Review of "The city's son" on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

London City is alive. When Beth and her best friend Pen are caught spraying graffiti at their school, Pen turns Beth in. Reeling from the betrayal, Beth stumbles into another London, one where railwraiths transport memories of passengers, where the lights are living glass people who dance at night, where the statues are imprisoned men, repaying their debts to their absent goddess, and where a danger threatens the very essence of the city that no one sees. And that city has a son.

Wow, I’m not sure how much I can express my love of Tom Pollock’s hidden London without spoiling the discovery for others. It reminds me of how children’s imaginations create worlds out of the incredibly mundane environment that surrounds them, street lights can be beautiful and exotic women that dance and flirt and real dangers such as trains and barbed wire can be turned into monsters.

After …

Subjects

  • Monsters
  • Fiction
  • Graffiti artists

Places

  • London (England)
  • England
  • London