Storm by Kevin Crossley-Holland a Carnegie Medal winner

Storm by Kevin Crossley-Holland won the Carnegie Medal in 1985. I have a bit of an ongoing personal project going, to read as many of these medal winners as I can. This one has been utilised as a Reading Ladder book, presumably some sort of educational tool. This has whittled the pages down to just 46 and as it’s heavily illustrated it’s a very quick read indeed, and unlike any of the other Carnegie Medal winners that I’ve previously read.

Annie is a young girl who lives with her parents in a remote country area, her much older sister Willa is married and living in a town three bus journeys away, but she is going to be having a baby soon, and her husband who works away from home isn’t able to get home in time for the birth. It’s almost Christmas and Willa makes the journey to her parents’ house.Despite the age difference the sisters get on well, and Willa is able to tell Annie the details of a local ghost story about a man who had been murdered by highwaymen near the ford – hundreds of years ago.

Three days later a terrific storm arrives, and it looks like Willa’s baby is determined to arrive too, but the phone lines are down so they can’t get through to the hospital.

Annie is sent out into the storm to fetch the local doctor, she’s frightened of meeting the ghost, but a horseman picks her up and takes her to the doctor’s house, and all is well.

I think that this book has been somewhat shortened, edited to fit the Reading Ladder. It’s a well written story, and I like the illustrations which are by Alan Marks, but I’m not sure about pushing ghost stories onto children, so I find it to be a strange choice for the Carnegie Medal. I hope their teachers tell them that ghosts aren’t real!

2 thoughts on “Storm by Kevin Crossley-Holland a Carnegie Medal winner

  1. Sounds like a good project but distressing if some of them have been abridged! Hard to believe this one could have been too complicated to read as the readers are supposed to be 8-12.

    I’ve read about 25 of these, some multiple times, but only two winners after 1992.

    • Constance,
      It’s certainly unlike any of the other Carnegie Medal winners I’ve read before. I’m sure there was one year when they declined to give the medal to any book as there was nothing good enough, or that might have been the James Tait Black one as I’m also trying to read as many of those ones as I can, but so many of the earlier ones seem to be just about unobtainable.

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