Cliffhanger

 

WARNING:

THE BANDERSNATCH BLOG MAY CONTAIN INFORMATION AND OPINIONS THAT THE PUBLIC MIGHT FIND OFFENSIVE. PLEASE NOTE THAT ALL INFORMATION WILL BE CHECKED AND OPINIONS DO NOT REFLECT THE OPINIONS OF THE MAIN BLOGGER HERSELF.


Hey there Earthlings, Alternatives and Trollers. Put down that mouse and lend an ear. Welcome to The Bandersnatch blog where we talk weird, wacky and wondrous. I'm The Bandersnatch and I have no idea what I'm doing.


As you should know Tuesdays is book blog day were we talk about one particular book and pretty much run with it. Today's blog is on the Jacqueline Wilson book Cliffhanger.


When his dad decides to send him on an adventure holiday, poor Tim—who is more suited to armchair pursuits—realises that this could turn out to be the very worst time of his entire life. Little does he know quite how bad things will get, especially when he is forced to bunk-in with the hideous, arrogant and bullying Giles. But as the holiday progresses he finds himself quite enjoying its challenges. Even abseiling—once he is safely back on the bottom of the cliff—doesn't seem so bad.


  • Cliffhanger Goodreads page


Cliffhanger was released on January 1st 1995 by Yearling. Now I didn't come across Cliffhanger until I was out of secondary school, but being a fan of Jacqueline Wilson I decided to read it and found I quite liked it. I highly recommend reading it especially if you're a Jacqueline Wilson fan and especially for the pre-teens and teens. I give the book an 8/10.


Born Jacqueline Aitken in Bath, Somerset on December 17th 1945. Wilson grew up with parents Harry (A civil servant) and Biddy (A house maid) loving to read and having a great Imagination, this gave her the nickname Jacky Daydream at nine years old, which eventually became the title of her autobiography detailing her primary school years. Wilson's first book debuted in 1969 and as she went on writing many of her books went onto be nominated and win several awards including the annual British book awards children's book of the year, the Whitbread awards shortlist and both the Smarties prize and the guardian children's fiction prize. In her teens, Wilson met her husband Millar Wilson who was a printer. They got married when she was nineteen and two years later they welcomed daughter Emma. They divorced in 2004 and by April 2020 Wilson announced publicly she was gay and had been living with her Partner Trish for eighteen years. In 2008 Wilson was appointed Dame commander of the Order of the British Empire a DBE, in 2012 she was elected as a honorary fellow of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge and in 2017 she received the special award at the BAFTA children's awards.

If you follow any creative artists, content creators or the like and cannot buy any of their Merch but consume their content keep an eye out for their Patreon and Ko-FI, donate a small amount if you wish, that

will help the creative community thrive.


STAY SAFE, STAY INFORMED, STAY ALIVE.


If you wish to contact for whatever reason and/or work with The Bandersnatch blog the Business Email is:


TheBandersnatch@yahoo.com.


WEBSITE BIBLIOGRAPHY:


https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/511663.Cliffhanger?ac=1&from_search=true&qid=c7imBvoPTb&rank=1


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jacqueline_Wilson


https://www.instagram.com/thebandersnatchblog/?hl=en


https://twitter.com/TBandersnatch


https://www.tiktok.com/@thebandersnatchuk


https://ko-fi.com/thebandersnatchmama


Cashapp: £TheBand3rsnatch


And there you have it a decent book for those who love to read So we'll be leaving this here for today please leave a comment, share with others if you want or not, Don't forget We HAVE KO-FI! please consider becoming a KO-FI Donator today, the link is in the bibliography above. Friday is random blog day and remember keep it sensible in the comments all abuse will be tracked and reported to the appropriate people.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

The Witcher: The Last Wish by Andrzej Sapkowski.

The George Hotel

The Witcher; The Sword of Destiny by Andrzej Sapkowski.