Picture of author.

Mary Hooper (1) (1948–)

Author of Newes from the Dead

For other authors named Mary Hooper, see the disambiguation page.

95+ Works 2,477 Members 97 Reviews 3 Favorited

Series

Works by Mary Hooper

Newes from the Dead (2008) 352 copies
Fallen Grace (2010) 253 copies
Petals in the Ashes (2004) 175 copies
Velvet (2011) 108 copies
At the House of the Magician (2007) 103 copies
Amy (2002) 67 copies
By Royal Command (2011) 62 copies
Poppy (2014) 53 copies
The Betrayal (2009) 49 copies
Megan (1999) 48 copies
Becky and Beauty (1998) 48 copies
Timmy and Tiger (1998) 39 copies
The Disgrace of Kitty Grey (2013) 37 copies
Megan 2 (1999) 36 copies
Pete and Perky (1998) 36 copies
Megan 3 (2001) 31 copies
Holly (2000) 24 copies
Best Friends, Worst Luck (1992) 20 copies
The Genie (1999) 20 copies
Poppy in the Field (2015) 20 copies
Ring of Roses (2014) 18 copies
Chelsea and Astra (2003) 16 copies
The New Girl (2003) 15 copies
The Boyfriend Trap (1994) 14 copies
Zara (2005) 14 copies
Mad About the Boy (1996) 14 copies
Time Flies (Tremors) (1996) 11 copies
A Dark Trade (2016) 11 copies
The Plague House (2004) 10 copies
Horror House (2004) 9 copies
First Term (1991) 8 copies
Spook Spotting (1994) 8 copies
The Lost Treasure (1997) 7 copies
Spooks Ahoy! (1997) 7 copies
Poppy's Big Push (1996) 6 copies
The Golden Key (1996) 6 copies
Spooked! (1996) 6 copies
Mischief and Mayhem! (2002) 6 copies
Witch House (2005) 5 copies
House of Secrets (1997) 5 copies
Poppy's Secret (1996) 5 copies
The School Trip (2005) 4 copies
Lexie (Teens) (1989) 4 copies
Making Waves (1988) 4 copies
Janey's Summer (Teens) (1992) 3 copies
Ray's Story (1995) 3 copies
Scandal Sheet (1993) 2 copies
Bleib bei uns, Donald (2002) 2 copies
Janey's Diary (1984) 2 copies
There Goes Summer (1993) 2 copies
Neighbourhood Witch (2004) 2 copies
Katie: The Revolting Baby (2008) 2 copies
Two Sides of the Story (1998) 2 copies
The Boys Next Door (1991) 2 copies
Star (1991) 2 copies
Kae's Secret (1994) 2 copies
Remembering Melanie (1989) 1 copy
Park Wood on Ice (1991) 1 copy

Associated Works

Losing It (2010) — Contributor — 39 copies

Tagged

Common Knowledge

Birthdate
1948-07-23
Gender
female
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
London, England, UK
Places of residence
Eversley Cross, Hampshire, England, UK
London, England, UK
Reading, England, UK
Oxfordshire, UK
Education
University of Reading
Occupations
historical novelist
young adult writer
Awards and honors
North East Book Award
Short biography
Mary Hooper is the author of more than 60 children's and young adult books.  She has two grown children and lives with her husband Richard in Oxfordshire, England, the same area Anne Green came from.  [from: Newes from the Dead (2008)]

Members

Reviews

Nicely done and well written young adult historical fiction. This author has a real talent for dropping the reader into the period and getting the fell of the setting and giving you characters to feel about with minimal set-up. She doesn't even stint on the realities of the situation although it is not as detailed as one would find in an adult novel of course. As described this a brief story set during the start of the London plague on 1665. I only have one minor problem with book and that is its sudden ending and semi-unfinished plotline (see spoiler) but overall it is a well written novel and it also has recipes the characters made in the book to try (modernized of course). The afterword was well done.

Do not read the spoiler unless you wish to be spoiled of course. Although unless you've read the book it won't make much sense.
The ending leaves them departing London, but doesn't really resolve what happens to them with the baby, or if they make it home safely. Considering the circumstances they found the child it is possible anything could have happened - including being refused in Dorchester, caught en route, or falling ill. While it might have been impractical to finish I think it should have been wound up somehow, it feels as if the reader is left hanging. As to Tom that part was left satisfactorily.
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Kiri | 11 other reviews | Dec 24, 2023 |
2.5 stars

I had really high hopes for this book. I love that it was an aunt who passed on the power to Tabitha. I didn't love that she used her powers for selfish ends. I would have loved to see greater character growth.

This is written in British English, and it was interesting to see British slang and grammar.

Unfortunately, God's name is misused a couple times, and murder and The X-Files are referenced - this is a children's beginner chapter book and therefore these references are just inappropriate.… (more)
 
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RachelRachelRachel | Nov 21, 2023 |
A quick check tells me Newes from the Dead by Mary Hooper was published in 2008, added to my virtual TBR pile back in 2016, and it has taken me until now to finally get around to requesting it from the library. Thankfully books wait for us no matter how many years it takes, and the premise that caught my attention in 2016 still appeals today.

Newes from the Dead by Mary Hooper is based on the true story of Anne Green who was hanged for committing the crime of infanticide, and later woke up on the dissecting table at Oxford University.

In 1650, and aged 22, Anne had been concealing her unwanted pregnancy when she went into labour early and gave birth in the privy to a stillborn baby. Anne hastily concealed the body, not wanting to lose her position as a domestic servant. The baby's body was later discovered, and after accusing Sir Thomas's grandson, Master Geoffrey of being the father, Sir Read abused his position as Justice of the Peace and ensured Anne was charged with murder - infanticide - and sentenced to hang.

'Infanticide is a cruel law which only applies to the lower classes,' Wilton continued. 'When was one of the aristocracy last hanged for such a crime? Can you tell me that?' Page 160

Life is often stranger than fiction, and Mary Hooper does a splendid job of taking us into the mind of Anne Green before the pregnancy, during the birth, her subsequent arrest, time in prison and right up to her hanging. The reader is even privy to Anne's thoughts as she waivers between life and death.

In bringing this true story to life, the author also gives us a look at the confusion and uncertainty when scholars preparing to dissect Anne's body in the name of science, notice her eye flicker and are able to detect a faint pulse. She was sentenced to hang, so is her revival a sign from God of her innocence? Or should justice prevail and the sentence carried out a second time?

When considering how best to 'help restore her to the world' a number of remedies are discussed, including:

'Cut pigeons in half and apply them to her feet?' Norreys suggested, but this being a method regarded as rather old-fashioned, all three doctors shook their heads. A powdered burned swallow and the dripping from a roast swan evoked similar responses. Page 183

The remedies discussed were amusing and Hooper confidently brings 17th century England to life. Here a character remarks on the fact it's so cold in Oxford that they can't make notes in the theatre room because the ink is frozen in the bottle.

"There's such a hard frost that the Thames has frozen over and hucksters' tents have been erected on it. The ice was so solid that a coach and six was driven right across it without so much as a creak being heard!" Page 45

I don't know why, but the fact that the Thames river regularly froze over - more than 20 times between 1400 and 1831 - is a favourite history factoid of mine and I love when it pops up in whatever I'm reading. The river was wider and slower then and artworks depicting the Frost Fairs really ignite the imagination.

Having recently finished reading The Murder of Harriet Monckton by Elizabeth Haynes, I couldn't fail to notice the similarity between the protagonist's plight in this book with that of Harriet Monckton; also a true story. It would seem the lack of agency for young women with unwanted pregnancies in 1650 wasn't much improved for Harriet two centuries later in 1843.

Fortunately for Anne, she was eventually given a pardon and went on to marry and have 3 children before dying 9 years after her execution.

Newes from the Dead by Mary Hooper is a young adult novel and a quick read that will appeal to fans of historical fiction.
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Carpe_Librum | 27 other reviews | Sep 3, 2023 |
 
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Mrs_Tapsell_Bookzone | 1 other review | Feb 14, 2023 |

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Associated Authors

Michael Page Narrator
Robin Hoffman Designer
Alexandra Ernst Translator
Pierre Mornet Cover artist
Michael Yuen Cover designer
Fanny Ladd Translator
Patricia Duez Translator
Kirstin Holbrow Illustrator
Jessica Fuchs Illustrator
Tom Bonson Illustrator

Statistics

Works
95
Also by
2
Members
2,477
Popularity
#10,352
Rating
½ 3.7
Reviews
97
ISBNs
317
Languages
10
Favorited
3

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