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Joss Ackland is the perfect choice as reader his husky whispery voice

Posted on 29 July 2010

Joss Ackland is the perfect choice as reader; his husky whispery voice is as liquorice rich as a malt whisky.Fresh and fantastical in a quite different way is Philip Ridley’s Dakota of the White Flats (Chivers, pounds 9.95, 2hrs 45mins, mail order 0800 136 919). Ridley is a masterly creator of doggedly bold kids and eccentric adults. Dakota Pink, whose mother hasn’t left an armchair since her father left 11 years earlier, is one of the most memorable. Mika falls out of a spaceship into the garden of a little boy called Joe, who is waiting for his parents to return from hospital with what he hopes is a new baby brother.

Through Mika’s eyes we see our own quite freshly – what a wonder is a hen, for example, the only creature in the universe to lay a daily egg. Books like this walk a tightrope between pretension and sentiment, but Gaarder carries it off. Garrett Moore is a splendidly impatient Little Prince.Jostein Gaarder, whose Sophie’s World was an international hit, has produced a book very kin to The Little Prince in Hello? Is anybody there? (Orion, 2 hrs, pounds 7.65). But how can it work without pictures, no elephant in a boa constrictor, you ask? The answer is, surprisingly well – when your aviator is Robert Powell, and Bernard Cribbins and Stephen Thorne are among the cast. But once I got into the rhythm of the thing, I found myself totally caught up in it. So, evidently, did the excellent cast, notably Joanna Wyatt as Lyra.
Another very special production, one to keep handy in the car for black dog days, is Bonnie Greer’s excellent dramatisation of Antoine St Exupery’s The Little Prince (BBC, 1hr 20mins, pounds 5.99). Fans of another undoubted classic, Philip Pullman’s trilogy His Dark Materials, will also welcome publication of the first book, Northern Lights (Cavalcade, pounds 24.99, 10hrs 30mins,).

The text is totally unabridged, and Philip Pullman himself is the main narrator All the dialogue is spoken by a large and varied cast. At first I wondered if I wouldn’t have preferred just Pullman, who has a hypnotically compelling voice. THIS AUTUMN sees an especially rich harvest of audiobooks for children. First on everybody’s list will be J K Rowling’s Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone (Cover to Cover, unabridged, 8hrs 20 mins, pounds 19.99).

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