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Stormwalker

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'Action-packed, compelling and ultimately moving' A Hermit's Progress BlogspotOwen Smith is worried about his dad. It's been a year since they lost Owen's mum, and Owen can see that his dad isn't coping with the grief that has engulfed them both. But Owen's dad is a writer, so when Owen suggests beginning another novel, he hopes it will help him. Then, something crazy happens. Owen wakes up in a strange world beyond his own, where a raging storm called the Darkness threatens to obliterate everyone and everything in its path. And soon Owen realises the startling he is inside his dad's story. And as the main character, only he can help his dad battle the storm and reach the end of the book... A page-turning action-adventure full of emotional heart, STORMWALKER is a must-read for young readers.

355 pages, Kindle Edition

First published December 6, 2016

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385 people want to read

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Mike Revell

3 books7 followers

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5 stars
33 (35%)
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31 (32%)
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21 (22%)
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7 (7%)
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Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews
Profile Image for Cindy Hudson.
Author 15 books26 followers
January 24, 2017
Owen doesn’t like to think about the longest day in his life, the day a year ago when his mom died. He is finally beginning to find joy in the good things in his life, like being with his best friend and playing soccer. But Owen is worried about his dad, who can’t seem to get over his grief. Things look up when his dad starts writing again; then Owen finds himself going out of his own reality and into a fantasy world, his dad’s story. Can he help both their lives by getting his dad to finish the tale, or will he get lost in the life of Jake, the character his dad created?

Storm Walker by Mike Revell examines the nature of grief through an inventive story about a boy who will always feel the loss of his mom but who also wants to live a vibrant life with his dad again. Owen’s forays into his dad’s story are difficult, as the world he enters is bleak and dangerous. He also loses big chunks of his own life, and begins to feel the separation from everyone important to him. Still, he persists because he wants to help his dad.

As Storm Walker moves between the two story lines, readers are pulled into what is happening in both. It’s a technique that’s not easy to accomplish, but Revell does a great job of keeping readers interested in what’s happening with Owen as well as with Jake, his literary doppelganger. The stories weave together in a way that will keep readers guessing about what happens next right up until the end.

I recommend Storm Walker for mother-daughter book clubs with girls aged 9 to 12.

The publisher provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Nikki.
81 reviews
February 28, 2017
I won this book free in a Goodreads giveaway.

This book is about a boy who lost his mom and dealing with that along with his dads depression. His dad starts to write a book and he finds himself suddenly in the book where he has to save the characters he grows to care for.

Since I also lost my mother as a child and had to deal with my dad being lost afterwards this book hit hard for me. The emotions in the book were real and true to what it is like in real life. The parts of the book where Owen (the main character) is in his father's books read quick and I could tell the alternate world was well thought out by the author. For a book targeted for children it was very well written.
Profile Image for Dwiki Mahendra.
5 reviews6 followers
January 1, 2020
It's a story about a father and son that's experiencing grief over the loss of his mother/wife. It is an exciting read because it has two story lines and we gonna get into both stories throughout the book, although I prefer rather more complicated plot, but considering this book might be written for middle grade readers, I believe it's complicated enough. You'd learn about loss, grief and depression and how to face those. Despite having a few plot holes, I enjoyed this story for having such balance of action, mystery and having emotional core in it.
3 reviews
April 30, 2018
This book is about a kid named Owen who has a wonderful life until the long day where his mother passed away and he live with his father who having trouble living alone until one day where he was at school and a storm happened and got carried until with him waking up in a other dimension that looks like home but later finds out he's in a book and leaves to wondering how would Owen survive the dangerous storm in the middle of his city and how would his friends known as storm walkers help.
Profile Image for Auranetya.
4 reviews
July 26, 2020
The book is good written by mike revell. Either the actors just contain several people like owen (the main character), his dad, and the other mike can engage how the stories flow really good. Beside the pass of owen mother has been really heavy, he manage to lift himself and his dad from this situation. Dad has been down from the long day but neither he still feel down, he try to write somestories about how he feels. Mike revell has done the good and the moral of the story that he want to show.
Profile Image for Claire.
3,444 reviews45 followers
August 18, 2022
A fascinating story and it was done really well. That sense of not knowing what's going on when you start a story and sometimes you feel like you have been dropped into the middle of it. And that is literally what is happening to Owen, although I was about to call him Jack! Lots of emotion, action and mystery. Great book!
2 reviews
January 3, 2021
When I got this book I didn't think I would like it but as soon as I started I couldn't put it down. I started reading it in school and didn't want to learn I just wanted to read! It's amazing if you like mystery and it's a bit like stranger things with the alt world!! I really recommend it!
Profile Image for Harper Peart.
4 reviews3 followers
May 7, 2018
This is such a great book and the theme is awesome. As soon as I started reading Stormwalker I couldn't put it down, my teacher even told me off because I was reading it in maths.
Profile Image for Suad Shamma.
731 reviews209 followers
February 18, 2019
I struggled with this book. It was a chore to get through it. The story was not gripping, the characters were not well-developed, and I just couldn't wait to finish it.

Owen was really carrying the weight of the whole book, and that wasn't fair to him, because he isn't the most remarkable character to begin with. His dad is kind of a jerk. I mean, I'm sorry your wife died, but this kid's mother died too, and it's been almost a year, so get a grip and take care of your child you useless man!

I found it slightly ridiculous that almost a year after his wife's death, it was writing a sci-fi story that got him out of his funk. A sci-fi story that almost got his boy killed, almost got him to miss out on the amazing opportunity of being scouted for football, and almost got him to lose his best friend.

And I'm not a huge fan of sci-fi, so having to spend a good portion of the book in this sci-fi world wasn't what I had signed up for.
1,133 reviews
January 12, 2017
A year after the death of his mother, a twelve year old boy urges his author dad to write again, thinking it will help with his dad’s grief, only the boy finds himself pulled into the bleak world of his father’s novel, jumping back and forth between his real life as an aspiring athlete, and the life of the boy in the book, forced to step up as a hero, and face his aching loss.

While there are some undeniably sad moments, it isn’t overwhelmingly so, it felt like the right balance for it’s intended middle-grade audience, touching on the difficult stuff just long enough before returning to more adventurous scenes.

The world-building in the father’s book wasn’t overly complicated, as an adult reader, I maybe wanted a little more, but again, it seemed like just enough for kids, and anyways it’s not really about the world-building, the more important thing is the emotional journey for this father and son.

I thought it would have been interesting to see a little more interaction between Owen’s two worlds, like if maybe his father found out what was going on, and part of their healing was in working through the story together, but it was still solid storytelling without that element, and the end of both stories had a really nice uplifting quality.

Lastly, more female characters would have been welcome, I did enjoy Iris, she had a great curiosity and sense of self in her scenes, though I would have loved if she’d played an even more prominent role.

I received this book through a Goodreads giveaway.
Profile Image for Erin Reilly-Sanders.
1,009 reviews25 followers
January 9, 2017
Review written for SLJ:
Grades 4-6
It’s been a year since 12-year-old Owen’s artist mom died, but he and his dad are still adjusting to the changes. While Owen is focusing on his soccer games, his dad hasn’t written anything since “the Longest Day.” When he starts writing again, Owen is sucked into the dystopian landscape of his father’s futuristic story and hopes that by living out the story he can help his dad heal.
Despite the semi-sentimental play on one of the oldest tropes of fiction, Storm Walker focuses on action and suspense. The characters are generally white, male, and even bland with personality imbedded in events more than anything else. Some readers may find the British English confusing, particularly with the sports terminology, but otherwise this dystopian book aims at a younger crowd than most. As a second novel, some of the issues such as not capitalizing on the ramifications of the father as author of the story and neglect of some of the more interesting aspects of the situation are likely to be worked out in future books. Although the writing builds up a generous amount of anticipation, the final plot reveal seems too simple, especially in comparison. In the end, this book may find a place in libraries in want of male-oriented, action-packed, and/or younger dystopian adventures.
VERDICT Storm Walker produces a story that is at once intriguing and tiresome that may appeal to middle graders more than adults.
Profile Image for Ruth.
Author 15 books9 followers
June 20, 2016
A truly exciting, imaginative story about a boy who becomes the hero of his writer Dad's terrifying story. This is a fantastic book. A terrific, action thriller with a real emotional core. It covers grief, loss, friendship and football and wraps them up in a page turning, adventure - my emotions were all over the place! I really couldn't put it down.
Profile Image for Amber C.
3 reviews
December 22, 2016
Stormwalker, by Mike Revell, is a beautifully well written tale about a son and father experiencing heavy grief over the loss of his mom/wife. This tale shares the true terrors of grief, and how the two overcome this terrifying stage of their lives, together, as son and father.
Profile Image for Susan.
966 reviews19 followers
December 23, 2016
I won this book through Goodreads. Heartbreaking but beautiful. Father and son find a way to get through their grief in a different way that works for them. Loved it.
10 reviews
December 14, 2017
Storm walkers was a very very good book written by mike revell. I loved the settings of this book because it was relatable and realistic sometimes and sometimes it was a fantasy dystopian setting that was a really good contrast to the other setting which was the life of a person in school just like us. I really liked the character Owen because he’s similar to me in some ways. For example Owen loves soccer just like me and just like me bad things happen to him by chance and not by his own fault. For example one of the bad things is that his mom died and my best friend died just a few years ago so this book was very comforting to read because it was about someone dealing with a similar experience to what I had. It talks about how his mom died on the longest day (that’s what he calls the day when his mother dies). It talks about the longest day many times throughout the book. One of the times when it talks about the longest day is when he is teleported into his father’s latest novel where he becomes his literary doppelgänger jake. The novel is his father’s way of dealing with his grief and its about a community called icarus 3 where a darkness is trying to attack and turn everyone dreamless (a state in which your soul and mind get ripped out of your body). And the first time the darkness gets close to jake (owen) it shows him memories of the longest day, it shows him the memories of his mother telling him she barely had any time left to live and Luke crying and hearing fro the doctor that his mother had died of leukemia. This books plot was amazingly written by mike revell and keeps you interested the entire time. I love the plot because it switches from a realistic fiction storyline to a fantasy timeline at the perfect moments so you never end up getting bored of the book or the plot. One of the other things I loved about this story was that it talked about how even if your not older or wiser than someone older than you you can still help them cope with horrible things like a death or maybe even something worse than that. This book is adventurous, heart breaking, and dramatic and I loved the book. Thank you mark revell for this literary adventure called storm walkers.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Displaying 1 - 16 of 16 reviews

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