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Gideon the Cutpurse [Paperback]

Linda Buckley-Archer
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
RRP: £5.99
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Book Description

4 Jun 2007 Gideon
An encounter with an anti-gravity machine catapults Peter Schock and Kate Dyer back to the 18th century and sets in motion a calamitous chain of events. While a massive police hunt gets underway to find the missing children in the 21st century - in 1763 a hardened criminal, the Tar Man, steals the anti-gravity machine and disappears into the London underworld. Stranded in another time and forced to chase the Tar Man to his lair, Peter and Kate find a friend and guide in reformed cutpurse, Gideon Seymour. Gideon does every thing he can to help them, but will his dark past catch up with him before the machine is recovered?

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Frequently Bought Together

Gideon the Cutpurse + The Tar Man (Gideon) + Time Quake (Gideon)
Price For All Three: £14.97

Buy the selected items together
  • The Tar Man (Gideon) £5.24
  • Time Quake (Gideon) £5.24


Product details

  • Paperback: 384 pages
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's; New edition edition (4 Jun 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1416916571
  • ISBN-13: 978-1416916574
  • Product Dimensions: 13.2 x 19.9 x 2.7 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: 369,770 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Product Description

About the Author

Linda Buckley-Archer was born in Sussex but spent most of her childhood in rural Staffordshire. She studied French literature and was a college lecturer for several years. She has tried her hand at all sorts of writing but loves writing for children, in particular. She now lives in South West London with her husband and two children.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The ultimate page-turner 11 Jun 2006
Format:Paperback
I was attracted to this book by the description on the cover, and by the Sunday Times children's book of the week review, and even though I am not really in the target age range, I wasn't disappointed. This is an impossible book to put down - the historic setting is so evocative, with brilliant 18th century characters and detail. But the writer also gets the science right (well, as far as I know, I only got O Level), making the idea of time travel very credible. The two child characters are great fun and you really sympathise with them, dumped 250 years from home.

The only problem is that the book leaves you on such a cliff hanger: the author needs to get writing fast to relieve the suspense.

One for the reading list if you have 'bottom' (which I learned is an 18th century term for courage or pluck!). Fantastic.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too 10 Jan 2007
By TeensReadToo TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Peter feels he has been brushed off by his father yet again--and he has been. He's been waiting for his birthday treat for months, but his father always has business meetings and is too busy to spend time with him. His mother is off working in Los Angeles, far away from Peter and his father in London. The morning Peter and his father fight about it again, Margrit, the Au Pair, takes Peter with her to visit her friends out in the country.

These friends have a daughter, Kate, who is about Peter's age, twelve. Kate's father takes the two of them, plus Kate's dog, Molly, to the lab where he works. Kate and Peter end up chasing Molly through the halls--a small thing that ends up being very important.

One minute, they're running through the halls of the lab. The next minute, Kate and Peter, along with an antigravity machine that one of Kate's father's colleagues has been working on, have been transported back in time to a grassy hillside in 1763.

Before long, they've met two very different men of that time. The first is the Tar Man, who steals the antigravity machine, which could very well be the key to getting back to the present. The second is Gideon, an enemy of the Tar Man, who decides to help the two children from the future.

Before long, Kate and Peter are on an adventure, headed to London to recover the antigravity machine and get back to their homes and families. On their way, they will encounter highwaymen, make friends (including Gideon), and learn a lot about that time in history--the good and the bad.

Back in present-day England, Peter's parents are frantic with worry. Kate's father has figured out that the machine has something to do with their disappearance--but when ghostly images of the children appear dressed in clothing from the eighteenth-century, it becomes clear that this can't be shared with the public; who knows what destruction could result from the misuse of time travel technology?

The parallel storylines--the children's quest to get back to the present and Kate's father's struggle to bring them back--go together quite nicely. The jumping back and forth is not as confusing as it could have been, and both parts of the story are extremely well-written. The characters are realistic, the storylines interesting, the history fascinating, and, well, every aspect of this book brilliant! The cover is very unique and will draw readers right in. The story inside will not disappoint them, either! GIDEON THE CUTPURSE is the first in a trilogy, and I can't wait for the next two books!

Reviewed by: Jocelyn Pearce
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Was this review helpful to you?
3 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Courtesy of Teens Read Too 26 Dec 2006
By TeensReadToo TOP 100 REVIEWER
Format:Paperback
Peter feels he has been brushed off by his father yet again--and he has been. He's been waiting for his birthday treat for months, but his father always has business meetings and is too busy to spend time with him. His mother is off working in Los Angeles, far away from Peter and his father in London. The morning Peter and his father fight about it again, Margrit, the Au Pair, takes Peter with her to visit her friends out in the country.

These friends have a daughter, Kate, who is about Peter's age, twelve. Kate's father takes the two of them, plus Kate's dog, Molly, to the lab where he works. Kate and Peter end up chasing Molly through the halls--a small thing that ends up being very important.

One minute, they're running through the halls of the lab. The next minute, Kate and Peter, along with an antigravity machine that one of Kate's father's colleagues has been working on, have been transported back in time to a grassy hillside in 1763.

Before long, they've met two very different men of that time. The first is the Tar Man, who steals the antigravity machine, which could very well be the key to getting back to the present. The second is Gideon, an enemy of the Tar Man, who decides to help the two children from the future.

Before long, Kate and Peter are on an adventure, headed to London to recover the antigravity machine and get back to their homes and families. On their way, they will encounter highwaymen, make friends (including Gideon), and learn a lot about that time in history--the good and the bad.

Back in present-day England, Peter's parents are frantic with worry. Kate's father has figured out that the machine has something to do with their disappearance--but when ghostly images of the children appear dressed in clothing from the eighteenth-century, it becomes clear that this can't be shared with the public; who knows what destruction could result from the misuse of time travel technology?

The parallel storylines--the children's quest to get back to the present and Kate's father's struggle to bring them back--go together quite nicely. The jumping back and forth is not as confusing as it could have been, and both parts of the story are extremely well-written. The characters are realistic, the storylines interesting, the history fascinating, and, well, every aspect of this book brilliant! The cover is very unique and will draw readers right in. The story inside will not disappoint them, either! GIDEON THE CUTPURSE is the first in a trilogy, and I can't wait for the next two books!

Reviewed by: Jocelyn Pearce
Comment | 
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