My journey to becoming an author has been a roundabout one, taking in many other careers. I grew up on the edge of Epping Forest and was that dreamy kind of child who was always writing stories. After reading English at Cambridge, I decided to find out as much as I could about the wider world so joined the Foreign Office and served in Poland. My work as a diplomat took me from the high point of town twinning in the Tatra Mountains to the low of inspecting the bottom of a Silesian coal mine.
On leaving Poland, I exchanged diplomacy for academia and took a doctorate in the literature of the English Romantic Period at Oxford. I then joined Oxfam as a lobbyist on conflict issues, campaigning at the UN and with governments to lessen the impact of conflict on civilians living in war zones - a cause about which I still feel very passionate.
Married with three children, I now live in Oxford between two rivers, surrounded by gargoyles, beautiful sandstone buildings and ancient trees.
My first novel, 'The Diamond of Drury Lane', won the Waterstone's Children's Book Prize 2006 and the Nestle Children's Book Prize 2006 (formerly known as the Smarties Prize). I was also chosen by Waterstone's in 2007 as one of their 'Twenty-five authors for the future'. In the US, 'Secret of the Sirens' won the honor book medal of the Green Earth Book Award.
My latest series, which starts with Mel Foster and the Demon Butler, about an intrepid Victorian orphan who lives in a household of monsters, won Bronze in the Primary Teacher awards in 2015. The next part, Mel Foster and the Time Machine, has set the time-dial to arrive in 2016.
The Society for the Protection of Mythical Creatures is once again under threat and not only from the evil shape-shifter Kullervo. Connie's Great-aunt Godiva, who gives a fair impression of Miriam Margolyes' Lady Whiteadder from season two of the Blackadder TV series and who, sadly, fails to go to Coventry and live up to her namesake, is determined to take Connie away from the Society. Which is bad news as Connie is the only Universal known to exist - someone who can speak the languages of all animals, mythical and real.
A major oil company wants to build a new road to link their coastal refinery to the transport network, which means that much of Mallins Wood will have to be cut down. Money, and no doubt "gifts", have changed hands and the local politicians are all for it. What they don't know, and probably wouldn't believe if you told them, is that Mallins Wood is the home of the last surviving gorgon and her brood of hatchlings.
What will happen next? The Society needs Connie to lead them, young Col needs Connie and Connie needs Col because, quite frankly, they fancy each other in a pre-adolescent way, Kullervo needs Connie either on his side or out of the way, Great-aunt Godiva, a former Society member turned spitefully puritanical, believes she needs to protect Connie from herself - and, for the rest of us, we all need the Society to defeat Kullervo or face extinction.
The Gorgon's Gaze is a lively, exciting fantasy adventure with a strong environmentalist ethic. The oil company executives and the politicians are not evil but they are misguided, their profits come before the world's wellbeing in their thoughts, while Connie, Col and the Society understand the importance of preserving the world's natural resources - in a tree hugging sort of way. Their natural allies are camping out in the wood in caravans and tents to block the road builders. Magic is all around with gorgons, dragons, flying horses and tree sprites. There is even a touch of Harry Potter when Connie, as apprentice Universal, is guided to the Society's library in London, approached through a narrow archaic street reminiscent of Diagon Alley and guarded by an antique librarian and a large snake on the stairs. While the Green agenda is occasionally pushed a little too vigorously, it is a stirring adventure with a good fight scene as a finale and a happy ending.
La mirada de la gorgona, ha sido una muy buena continuación, pues ha superado todas mis expectativas. He disfrutado mucho con su lectura, pues me ha mantenido pegada a sus páginas en todo momento. Está repleta de acción, aventuras y misterio, y me ha encantado volver a reencontrarme con unos personajes tan divertidos, honestos y fuera de lo común, así como con sus criaturas míticas tan alucinantes.
Connie Lionheart is no ordinary member of the Society for the Protection of Mythical Creatures. She is the only universal companion -- she is able to bond with all of the mythical creatures (dragons, pegasi, wood sprites, sirens, etc.) that live secretly in our world. To protect the mythical creatures, Society members protect the last wild spots on earth in which the creatures can survive. In the Gorgon's Gaze, that wild spot is an ancient wood (including a huge oak rumored to be the tree where Merlin was imprisoned by Nimue) threatened by a road to the new oil refinery from Book One, Secret of the Sirens.
The story is a rollercoaster of YAYs and UH-OHs that keeps the pages turning:
YAY! Connie's new companion will be a rare golden baby dragon. UH-OH! Connie's great aunt is going to isolate Connie from nature and from the society members to "cure" her of her "sickness." YAY! Two unknown-to-her-aunt members of the Society manage to get Connie out of the house and to Society Headquarters. UH-OH! Mr. Codderington at the Society Headquarters is surely a bad guy. Watch out, Connie! YAY! Argand, the baby dragon, comes to visit Connie. UH-OH! Col's (Connie's friend and fellow society member, companion to pegusi) mother is companion to a gorgon. YAY! Uncle Hugh unknowingly gives Connie information on how a Universal can protect herself from hostile mythical creatures. (One of Connie's ancestors was a Universal, and Uncle Hugh gives Connie some of her papers from a trunk of family heirlooms.) UH-OH! Aunt Godiva is really mad when she finds out what Uncle Hugh gave Connie and she cracks down on Connie like never before. At the same time, Col is taken by Kullervo, the ultimate evil. (Kullervo is Connie's Voldemort -- her true companion. Her good and his evil are intimately intertwined. "He was part of her -- and she was part of him.") YAY! With the help of Skylark, Col's pegasus, Connie goes to the rescue of Col. UH-OH! It's a trap! Connie is taken by Kullervo!
You'll have to read the book to find out how it all turns out. I predict that the new character, a boy nicknamed "Rat," will feature prominently in the next book.
This second installment in Golding's Companions Quartet takes Connie and Col deeper into the fight to save a wooded area from developers and a whole host of fantastic creatures as well. Members of a secret Society, both friends possess a gift that allows them to see so-called mythical creatures and to communicate with them. But all is not fairy tales and unicorns for the pair of tweens as evil threatens the delicate balance of nature and the sprites, dragons and others who struggle to survive while remaining hidden from the view of most humans. This evil, known as Kullervo, has amassed a host of beasts who are angered by humanity's disregard for natural beauty and has a plan to ensnare Connie and use her power as a Universal. Add to Connie's skills one of the last remaining Gorgon's, and nothing will ever be the same. Readers of Fablehaven and fans of Avatar will enjoy this book 2 as much as book 1-a great choice for 5th-8th graders who love reading fantasy.
Connie Lionheart is back in athrilling sequel to Secret of the Sirens. Connie, the spunky universal, now has other problems on her mind. Col's mother, companion to gorgon's, is visiting. Rumor has it she wants to capture Col for Kullervo. The oil company Axoil is trying to build a road through Mallins Wood, causing public outcry, and Connie's great aunt and uncle have taken her away to wash all that 'society nonsense' out of her. Once again, Kullervo tries to breach Connie's weak points, and a rare species of mythical creatures is about to die out. It is time for Connie to find out more secrets...and more lies.
This book carries a lot of environmental messages that carry across very powerfully. It drags you to Hescombe, just like the first book did. A must-read!
- May 2021 - I don't have much to add to my very ~verbose~ review from 2015 (read sarcasm), other than to say that this was an incredibly fun read for my preteen/teenage self, especially during my Percy Jackson withdrawal days. There is a heavy environmentalist focus throughout the series, which I quite enjoy, and the characters are all generally likable. I remember enjoying the plot and character development more in the later installments of the series, so I definitely sped through the first two a bit so I could get to the last two.
After my review of the first book I thought this one would be a lot better and for the most part it was. There wasn’t as much character development which was good, they introduced a couple of new characters but not so many that you start to get confused and more happens with the antagonist Kullervo having a more prominent part in this book.
I knocked it down a star purely because there were a couple of new characters that really annoyed me and I’d rather they weren’t in it. But that’s just my opinion.
Overall though, better than the first and I will be reading the third soon.
Julia Golding certainly knows how to tell a pageturner, you eagerly follow the adventures of Col and Connie wondering what will happen to them next. I was surprised though to learn that they aren't even twelve yet. They and their friends seem pretty capable for their age.
I read this series years ago, but reading the Mark of the Thief raised it back in my thoughts. It’s a great series. Maybe at a 5-7th grade level. I distinctly remember the characters being unique. I hope you all like this book:)
Enjoyable middle grade "eco-fantasy". I think I like this one better than the first, but I can't say why, exactly. Maybe just that this time I knew going in that it was more middle grade than YA.
This book is a follow-up to the last book “secret of the sirens”, here however Connie is taken by her great-aunt Godiva,and is banned from all society business. However Kullervo is lurking to snatch her yet with no communication to the society she is unprepared, when she finally escapes she lands in Kullervo’s trap, he had used Col as bait! Kullervo takes advantage of the bulldozing in the wood (though many humans are protesting) too show his mythical supporters that humans should be despised. All is well in the end, with Godiva (who apparently had the gift but denied it for madness and had tried to “cure” Connie) made sure Connie was back with Evelyn.
This is a really nice book, the only reason I gave it 4 stars is because I would’ve liked more action and to see more of the mythical creatures. I love Argand, Connie’s companion, and I like the mystery imposed. I would have certainly given this book 5 stars if Godiva had more weak spots. Nevertheless, I would still (and will) recommend it to my friends.
It had been over 10 years I think since I read the first book in this series, yet I still enjoyed part two. Connie's story has the typical makings of a YA urban fantasy, including absent parents and an enemy only matched by the hero. I wish the world building was explored a bit more, and maybe some new creatures introduced, because it felt like this barely scratched the fantasy surface. I'd like to continue this story!
While Connie's great-aunt Godiva tries to "cure" her of the Society's ways, Colin finds his distant mother, gorgon companion, suddenly trying to spend more time with him, leading the duo into dangerous territory as Kullervo seeks another opportunity to bond with the Universal! Golding delivers another fun and heartwarming entry to this fantastic series that will keep fans glued to the pages. Can Connie convince her family to trust her before she falls into a deadly trap?
I highly recommend this fantastic book, and the series in which it is to all readers who love: magic, believing in the right of life for all living things, and reading about mythical creatures. Golding uses imaginative plots to bring the battle for environmental protection of the precious few "wild" places we are blessed to still have, and does so with entertaining wit and sensitivity. Enjoy!
I really enjoyed the drama of this book of Connie being taken away from the Society, and I found the character of Godiva super interesting, as well as Cassandra. I like how these books have both Axoil and Kullervo as two big antagonists and I’m excited to see how they’ll be defeated at the end of the series!
I'm enjoying this series - very interesting to have her just get used to living with one aunt My only issue with this book is that her aunt Very enjoyable instalment and I'm glad .
Poor Connie, having to deal with family members who aren't in the Society, and therefore not privy to their secrets. It makes it so much more difficult to let them know what's going on when she has to do Society business without letting them in on it. Well crafted.
In The Gorgon's Gaze, Connie has to struggle with her family trying to force her away from the society, along with trying to find a way to protect herself and everyone else from the villain. Interesting story, and I look forward to the next one.
Good storyline, the characters were believable. Makes me want to be the universal. Being able to bond with all the mythical creatures would be awesome,