The Primrose Railway Children

by Jacqueline Wilson, illustrated by Rachel Dean

Interest age: 9 to 11
Reading age: 8+

Published by Puffin, 2021

  • Coming-of-age

About this book

Phoebe loves her dad more than anything. So when he leaves home without warning, she is confused and hurt. And that’s made worse by the strangers with cameras who lurk outside the house and knock on the door with odd questions.

When Mum takes Phoebe and her siblings out of school and relocates them to a dilapidated cottage in the middle of nowhere, her confusion grows. But things look brighter after Mum explains that Dad is on a secret assignment for a television company.

And when they discover the Primrose Railway not far away, everything seems better. Until the cracks in Mum’s story start to show...

In a book inspired by E Nesbit’s classic The Railway Children, Jacqueline Wilson is at her storytelling best.

Phoebe is a great narrator and alternative perspectives are given through the experiences of her older siblings: Perry, who is on the autistic spectrum and becomes obsessed with the railway; and Becky, who is trying to manage new friendships and, perhaps, her first boyfriend.

Typically, there are no easy solutions to some very complex problems but the story is packed with adventure, mishaps, love and, ultimately, a happy ending.

About the author

Jacqueline Wilson was born in Bath in 1945, and spent her childhood in Kingston-on-Thames, Surrey, where she still lives today. She started her writing career as a teenage journalist with D.C. Thompson, writing for the teenage magazine Jackie which was named after her. Today her popular books for children have sold millions of copies and have been translated into more than thirty languages.

Jacqueline's books include The Story of Tracy Beaker, which has become a hugely successful BBC TV series; Girls in Love, which together with its two sequels was filmed for ITV television; and Double Act, which she adapted for Channel 4 and which won the Royal TV Society's Best Children's Fiction Award. As the fourth Children's Laureate (2005-2007) she promoted the importance of sharing books, and reading aloud together.

What to read next

We know that children can get hooked on a favourite book series or author and struggle to find something they love as much, but we’re here to help.

More books like this

Share this page Twitter Facebook LinkedIn