I don't do rehashes of the plot in reviews, you can find teasers elsewhere. What I will tell you is that Kim Watt is a skilled writer of great depth and pathos. You'll find her work under the genre of cozy mysteries, but they are more, so much more. Her work is multi-layered: it can be enjoyed as an easy read, full of chuckling, charm and challenges, or considered more deeply as social commentary. This part is one of the most beautiful pieces of writing I have ever read:
"She thought she’d do almost anything to protect the people in this room, all these glorious and different people of all species… She’d do it to protect that wonderful strangeness, because it lived in every one of them. Because everyone is a little strange, in their own beautiful and complicated way, and that should be celebrated."
I just read another review talking about replacing banned kids' books with the Beaufort Scales books, and I couldn't agree more. Because the themes Kim raises are universal; friendship, loyalty, kindness, acceptance of 'otherness', bravery in the face of fear, the concept of helping others because they need it, not because there's anything in it for you. Our children could do a lot worse than study these books.
I strongly recommend Kim's work. It is beautifully written, wonderfully characterised, brilliantly paced and heart-rendingly touching. Plus, there are dragons and cake (with recipes). Win-win.