Skulduggery Pleasant

3 stars out of 53 stars out of 53 stars out of 53 stars out of 53 stars out of 5
Derek Landy
Published by HarperCollins
368pp, 0007241623, £12.99 hbk; 978 0 00 724161 3
cover of Skulduggery Pleasant

Derek Landy is a young Irish writer who possesses in spades the literary equivalent of the gift of the gab. His present novel is about a spirited 12-year-old girl who teams up with a crusading, living skeleton in order to save the world from an evil sorcerer. This is not always easy to believe, particularly when the skeleton in question, Skulduggery Pleasant himself, also has a mean right hook and is susceptible to pain and even death. But never mind – the whole story rattles along easily as well as inconsequentially, rather like one of those rambling bar-room conversations that seem amusing at the time but are difficult to recall on the following day. The author is also a black belt in Kenpo Karate, and this sometimes shows in his over-long descriptions of the numerous fights that keep breaking out. But otherwise this is all good, amiable stuff, excellent for holiday reading.

Reviewed in BfK No. 166 (September 2007) by Nick Tucker (NT)
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