A Thrilling Tale: Read an Extract from We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord by Garth Nix

A Thrilling Tale: Read an Extract from We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord by Garth Nix

Without warning, the sun went out. Only for a fraction of a second, but it was definitely gone. Or so claimed the one scientist who had been paying attention. It was 1975, and the computers monitoring the few solar telescopes that were watching were not very advanced, so it was presumed to be a programming glitch or something like that. All the other scientists said she was wrong.

But the scientist wasn’t wrong. In that split second the sun had disappeared and come back again, and the world had changed, even if no one knew it. Reality had rippled and bent, and there was suddenly something new on Earth that had not been there before.

A small globe, golden and shining, appeared in the shallows of an artificial lake. For a few moments it lit up the water – until it rolled around and coated itself in mud, and the light was dimmed. It continued to roll on, into a patch of weed that wrapped around it, fronds trailing up like hair from a severed head.

It was a twelve-minute ride down to that lake from Kim Basalt’s home, an easy coast even on his heavy old bicycle and a breeze on Bennie Chance’s new ten-speed. Their younger siblings, Eila and Madir, took longer, always following but never catching up.

Kim, whose full name was Chimera Xanthoparmelia Basalt, was twelve years old, as was his best friend Bennie, whose full name was Benjamina Ramella Chance. Their younger sisters were only ten years old, Eileithyia Indigofera Basalt and Madir Sofitela Chance. They had known each other all their lives, but each pair became friends in preschool because, for that time, they had unusual names.

The quartet rode down to the lake almost every evening, after dinner for Kim and Eila because their parents insisted on eating together early, and before dinner for Bennie and Madir, whose meals were generally late and unpredictable. First Kim would ride down from the experimental farm on the mountain (a hill really) where his family lived to Bennie’s house, which was on the highest street of the suburb below the mountain, with Eila trailing behind. Bennie would be ready and ride out straight away, with Madir yelling out to Eila to wait for her as she put on her shoes or looked for her hair band or whatever.

The night the globe appeared was like any other night for the kids, at first. Once they got to the lake, Kim and Bennie put their bikes down by the boat ramp and sat on the park bench by the pebble-strewn foreshore to chat and skip stones, while Eila and Madir lounged on the merry-go-round in the playground behind, idly pushing it with their feet while they talked. The two groups were far enough apart that neither could hear what the other duo was talking about, which was the way they all liked it…

Continue reading the extract here.

Buy a copy of We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord here.

 

Reviews

3 Reasons Why You Should Read We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord by Garth Nix

Review

28 October 2024

3 Reasons Why You Should Read We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord by Garth Nix

Publisher details

We Do Not Welcome Our Ten-Year-Old Overlord
Author
Garth Nix
Publisher
Allen & Unwin
Genres
Children’s Fiction, Science Fiction
Released
29 October, 2024
ISBN
9781761180491

Synopsis

All Kim wants to do is play Dungeons & Dragons with his friends and ride his bike around the local lake. But he has always lived in the shadow of his younger sister. Eila is a prodigy, and everyone talks about how smart she is, though in Kim's eyes, she has no common sense. So when Eila finds an enigmatic, otherworldly globe which gives her astonishing powers, Kim not only has to save his sister from herself, he might also have to save the world from his sister!
Garth Nix
About the author

Garth Nix

Garth Nix was born in 1963 in Melbourne, Australia. A full-time writer since 2001, he previously worked as a literary agent, marketing consultant, book editor, book publicist, book sales representative, bookseller, and as a part-time soldier in the Australian Army Reserve.Garth's books include the award-winning young adult fantasy novels SabrielLiraelAbhorsen and Clariel; the dystopian novel Shade's Children; the space opera A Confusion of Princes; and a Regency romance with magic, Newt's Emerald.His fantasy novels for children include The Ragwitch; the six books of the Seventh Tower sequence; the Keys to the Kingdom series; and the Troubletwisters series and Spirit Animals: Blood Ties (co-written with Sean Williams).More than five million copies of his books have been sold around the world, his books have appeared on the bestseller lists of the New York TimesPublishers Weekly, the Guardian and the Australian, and his work has been translated into forty languages. He lives in a Sydney beach suburb with his wife and two children.

Books by Garth Nix

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  1. Adam Ders says:

    Garth Nix, born in 1963 in Melbourne, Australia, has been a full-time writer since 2001. Before focusing on writing, he held various roles in the book industry, including literary agent and book editor, and served part-time in the Australian Army Reserve. His well-known young adult fantasy novels include Sabriel, Lirael, Abhorsen, and Clariel, while his children’s books include The Ragwitch and the Keys to the Kingdom series. His works have sold over five million copies worldwide and have appeared on bestseller lists like the New York Times and the Guardian. Translated into forty languages, his stories have reached readers globally. He resides with his family in a beach suburb of Sydney.