For fans of The Swifts and A Series of Unfortunate Events comes the story of a young orphan at the edge of society who finds herself at the center of a city’s secrets
Maggie Fishbone is not expecting much when she’s sent to the Midwatch Institute for Orphans, Runaways, and Wayward Girls—the last resort after causing a ruckus at the orphanage where she was living. Except . . . the Institute isn’t some dreadful, dreary place like she thought.
Instead it’s full of curious girls training to solve mysteries, fight bad guys, and keep the city safe. In between fencing lessons and discovering all the shortcuts in the building, Maggie finds herself making friends at the Midwatch and finally feeling like she’s home. And when a woman goes missing, Maggie’s off on her first assignment, with each step leading her deeper into the secrets of the city.
With gorgeous black-and-white illustrations and pages of “Useful Things Every Girl Should Know” (like how send messages in morse code and how to shout extremely loudly), The Midwatch is a whimsical, adventure-filled mystery from internationally bestselling author-illustrator Judith Rossell.
Every now and then I read Middle Grade novels because they are just a joy and can be such a great escape. This one was enjoyable, and I can definitely see children really loving it. It's about Maggie, who gets kicked out of her orphanage to go to The Midwatch Institute for Wayward Girls. She's expecting this to be a bad place, but is surprised to find out that there is a secret club for amateur detective girls where they learn all kinds of skills to help them solve cases. She becomes friends with some of the girls and loves the staff. They become more of her found family and finally feels her sense of belonging. The characters are so cute and I think kids are going to love the adventures in this book.
Thank you to the publisher and netgalley for the gifted copy. All opinions are my own.
This is such a beautiful book with lovely illustrations and a great premise. I very much enjoyed the beginning but felt that Maggies journey got caught up in the plot and I longed for more characterisation.
Thank you to Penguin Young Readers Group for the gifted copy of The Midwatch Institute for Wayward Girls.
The Midwatch Institute for Wayward Girls by Judith Rossell is adventurous, inspiring, and a little bit quirky. This whimsical story is great for young readers who like Matilda. I loved the artwork and the added “Useful Things Every Girl Should Know.”
A ‘feel GREAT’ girl’s own adventure. What do orphans need? It’s not cruelty, ceaseless drudgery and gruel that’s for sure. I suspect they need kindness, some hot chocolate and friendly companionship followed by some training in the essential arts of knot tying, walking silently, Morse code and perhaps the Charleston? And now on to the important task of thwarting monsters, rescuing old ladies and catching bad guys. This is an absolutely brilliant middle grade novel filled with cosy good vibes and fantastic illustrations. Read it as soon as it’s released this October Thank you to Hardie Grant for this ARC
Read: June June 19th - June 28th Format: E-Book Rating: 3 Stars
Thank you to netgalley and the publisher for this e-ARC in exchange for an honest review!
This was a cute middle grade book overall. A nice secret-agent-type school for 'outcast' girls with a lot of fun and creativity put into its system. I think it'd even make for a very fun show or something for kids.
While I can appreciate how fun this could be for kids, it's one of those MG that just reads too young and misses the mark for me. I think it's mostly because it was so much more plot oriented. Harriet steals the show so much that for a bit I forgot Maggie's name 🤣 I am extremely character oriented, so such a plot-forward story just didn't do as much for me. Still a fun story for younger readers, though!
I love that this book has young girls as the heroines! I was drawn to reading this based on my love of the authors previous books but this didn't keep my interest as much and I didn't feel as invested in the main characters as I did with the Withering-By-Sea series. Though the illustrations throughout are gorgeous.
4.5 Good gravy I enjoyed this (and the funny exclamations)! I am a sucker for a school for spies/detectives, I loved the illustrations, the characters and steampunk setting were memorable, and the tongue-in-cheek tips for various things such as knot tying and how to shout loudly were delightful.
My daughter and I read this together and it was a brilliant kids book that kept both my 5 year old and myself engaged, and eager to keep reading. Great mystery, fun characters and wonderful world building. A real delight.
Beware little girls, if you are bad and unwanted you will end up at the worst of the worst of the worst orphanages - Midwatch.
Or is it?
This book is over-the-top-ridiculousness. Reminiscent of Lisa Yee’s Misfits series and Friday Barnes, another Aussie mystery series. There was nothing about this that needed to be taken too seriously. My favorite, the Countess, the simply drawn, but oh so lucious villainess. Every time she yelled, “Little Girls” I was in stitches.
Huge thanks to Netgalley and the publisher for approving this arc!
Despite Rossell's books being popular in Australia while I was a kid I never picked up her popular Withering by the Sea series as my elder sister had beat me to it, so imagine my joy when I come across this author once again. This book did not disappoint, the writing was transportive, the characters loveable and the plot enthralling. Every other page was filled with illustrations done by the author (!) which were beautiful and immersive. The aesthetic is one I've never been able to get over, with a slightly Victorian feel which greatly complimented the narrative. The basic premise for the book is Maggie is sent to an orphanage for girls which presents itself a terrible place to live, only teaching things like sewing and cleaning. However that is but a facade and the ladies who run it train the girls in plenty of useful endeavours; rope tying, hiding, surviving hypnosis etc in an effort to fight crime in London. Overall the novel was charming and I hope to Inshallah add this to my primary school classroom one day.