Simon, the foundling from The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, arrives in London to meet an old friend and pursue the study of painting. Instead he finds himself unwittingly in the middle of a wicked crew's fiendish caper to overthrow the good King James and the Duke and Duchess of Battersea. With the help of his friend Sophie and the resourceful waif Dido, Simon narrowly escapes a series of madcap close calls and dangerous run-ins. In a time and place where villains do nothing halfway, Simon is faced with wild wolves, poisoned pies, kidnapping, and a wrecked ship. This is a cleverly contrived tale of intrigue and misadventure.
Joan Aiken, daughter of the American writer Conrad Aiken, was born in Rye, Sussex, England, and has written more than sixty books for children, including The Wolves of Willoughby Chase.
Maryn McKenna is a senior writer at WIRED.
@ejwillingham @aetiology dear god, I’ve never seen that. But I loved Joan Aiken as a teen: The Wolves of Willoughby Chase, Black Hearts in Battersea...
Writer, academic, Oxford & LMH. Thinking abt reading/what libraries mean. My book abt books/love/grief out now #thelostpropertiesoflove. views mine - she/her
@emilieKMmurphy @RJPalacio Oh and A Wrinkle in Time. And Joan Aiken Black Hearts in Battersea
Retired LA adviser Author Drama & Reading for Meaning (Routledge) Drama & Writing (Routledge) Red Snow (Troubador) Angel's Child (Troubador)
@PrimarySchoolBC Just finished reading a charity shop find - Black Hearts in Battersea by Joan Aiken - it kept my interest -a good story but written in 1965 it is of it's time with some implicit values that might be interesting to challenge with children nowadays.