book cover

Moose Baby

by Meg Rosoff

Interest age: 16+
Reading age: 14+

Published by Barrington Stoke, 2015

  • Fantasy
  • Funny

About this book

Jess knew having a baby at seventeen was not going to be easy, especially as everyone kept telling her so. But nothing could have prepared her for giving birth to a moose baby.

Non-human children are rare, but not unheard of, so Jess and her boyfriend Nick do the best they can with their four-legged, hairy, 85kg child. First steps, toilet training and primary school all throw up additional stresses for the new parents but when their rapidly growing moose hits sexual maturity at the age of three, they begin to question their ability to look after him at all.

This utterly hilarious short novel highlights the difficulties of raising a child that is different, especially when you are a young parent. Despite the surreal subject matter, Jess and Nick are believable and likeable characters. A fun, quirky read that will have you laughing out loud.

About the author

Meg Rosoff was born in Boston, USA in 1956, the second of four sisters. She attended Harvard University in 1974. After three years at Harvard she moved to England and studied sculpture at Central St. Martins in London, England. She returned to the United States to finish her degree in 1980, and later moved to New York City for nine years, where she worked in publishing and advertising.

Aged 32, Meg returned to London and has lived there ever since. Between 1989 and 2003, she worked for a variety of advertising agencies as a copywriter. She began to write novels after her youngest sister died of breast cancer. Her young adult novel How I Live Now was published in 2004, in the same week she was diagnosed with breast cancer. It won The Guardian Children's Fiction prize, the Michael L. Printz Award in the United States, and was shortlisted for a Whitbread Award in 2004. In 2005 she published a children's book, Meet Wild Boars, which was illustrated by Sophie Blackall. Her second novel, Just in Case, was published in 2006 and won the 2007 CILIP Carnegie Medal and Germany's Jugendliteraturpreis.

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