The tiny Tindims are like the Borrowers-on-Sea, who turn our everyday rubbish into treasure. The Mother-and-daughter duo of prizewinning Sally Gardner and Lydia Corry create a fun new world of characters and adventures in their empowering new series for five- to eight-year-olds that inspires conservation and inventive ways to recycle.
In the fourth Tindim adventure, a glow-in-the-dark squid, drawn by the light of the moon, has wandered far from its friends on the ocean bed to the lake on Rubbish Island. The Tindims are puzzled by their new shiny lake, but with the help of Spokes, Barnacle Bow and a rather special invention, they discover the squid and try to help it on its way home again.
Sally Gardner grew up and still lives in London. Being dyslexic, she did not learn to read or write until she was fourteen and had been thrown out of several schools, labeled unteachable, and sent to a school for maladjusted children. Despite this, she gained a degree with highest honors at a leading London art college, followed by a scholarship to a theater school, and then went on to become a very successful costume designer, working on some notable productions.
After the births of twin daughters and a son, she started first to illustrate and then to write picture books and chapter books, usually with fairytale- or otherwise magical subject matter. She has been called 'an idiosyncratic genius' by London’s Sunday Times.
Four stars for putting me to sleep after five minutes of listening. It took me nearly a fortnight to get through this book because I kept listening to the same five minutes over and over again. I doubt it was the author’s intention to write such a soporific book, but it was much appreciated.