HappyHead

HappyHead by Josh Silver

Book of the Week: 20 August 2023

Cover image by Shutterstock

The HappyHead Project offers young people the opportunity to find lasting happiness and success and Seb Seaton, who has been selected as one of its first intake of students, is on his way to the isolated campus to take part.

His parents are concerned about his failing grades and his mental health and although Seb is dreading having to mix with strangers and take part in possibly challenging activities, he wants to please his parents and perhaps experience a fresh start after some problems in school.

He and the other students are welcomed with a speech from the founder Dr Eileen Stone, who tells them that emotional problems amongst young people are at an all-time high and that loneliness and dysfunction are preventing them from achieving their potential. HappyHead is going to help them deal with these challenges and, at first, the disciplined routine and mindfulness sessions seem designed to achieve that. Seb is introduced to his team mates who range from the shy and reticent Ash to the ultra-competitive Eleanor. The most intriguing person he meets is the unsettling Finn with his piercing gaze, tattoos and uncooperative attitude. Seb doesn’t know what to make of him but can’t get him out of his mind.

As the days pass, Seb, who has been slightly sceptical to begin with, starts to feel more and more uneasy about many elements of the course. Finn tries to persuade him that there is a threatening purpose behind all the exercises and the almost fanatical emphasis on happiness. Should he be believed and who can Seb truly trust in this bewildering new environment?

HappyHead has been compared to The Hunger Games, and it does have the element of survival tests and ongoing tension, but includes more low-key and relatable dilemmas. Seb is a sympathetic and witty narrator who we can all root for.

A sequel called Dead Happy is due in 2024.

If you enjoy reading dystopian fiction that features sinister organisations, try The Disappeared by C.J. Harper and two books by William Sutcliffe – Concentra8 and We See Everything.

More dystopian fiction can be found on this list I created a few years ago.

Wolf By Wolf

Wolf By Wolf by Ryan Graudin

Book of the Week: 26 June 2016

Wolf-by-Wolf-cover

This is a busy time of the year when the Warwickshire Year 9 Book Award is launched. I am in the middle of recruiting a Judging Team of twelve of our current Year 8 students, as well as reading the shortlisted books. I have therefore picked a book that was published in 2015 but which I haven’t read. Here is the publisher’s (Indigo, an imprint of the Hachette Children’s Group) blurb:

Once upon a different time, there was a girl who lived in a kingdom of death. Wolves howled up her arm. A whole pack of them – made of tattoo ink and pain, memory and loss. It was the only thing about her that ever stayed the same.

Germany, 1956. Over ten years since the Nazis won the war. Seventeen-year-old Yael is part of the resistance, and she has just one mission: to kill Hitler. But first she’s got to get close enough to him to do it.

 

Year 9 Book Award

The four books shortlisted for the Warwickshire Year 9 Book Award, 2016. ‘One’ by Sarah Crossan was awarded the prestigious CILIP Carnegie Medal last week.