Beast Quest
Multiple Series | |
Author | "Adam Blade", a pseudonym for various ghostwriters |
---|---|
Illustrator | David Wyatt, Steve Sims. |
Country | United Kingdom |
Language | English |
Genre | Children's fantasy |
Publisher | Orchard Books |
Published | 2007–present |
Media type | Print (hardback and paperback) E-book |
Beast Quest is a best-selling series of children's fantasy/adventure novels produced by Working Partners Ltd and written by several authors all using the house name Adam Blade. Adam Blade was in his twenties. [1] An editorial team at Working Partners first creates the storyline for each book and "then approach[es] a number of writers whose experience and style we think might suit the project and ask them to write a sample – usually the first three chapters of the book... The editorial team picks the sample with the voice that we think works best for the project."[2] The main series had achieved 122 books published by mid-2019. 18 million copies of the books sold to date.[3]
The series is published by Orchard Books in the UK and by Scholastic Corporation in the US and is aimed largely at boys aged 7 and over.[4][5] The novels have been described as "clearly and simply written, [striking] the right balance between adventure and story telling" and a "great series to get lads, who normally wouldn't be, interested in reading."[6] Kathryn Flett, writing in London's The Observer, has called the books "almost certainly a work of publishing (if not quite literary) genius... Narnia meets Pokémon via Potter."[7] The books are among the most-borrowed from UK lending libraries.[8][9] There is also a companion science fiction series called Sea Quest.[10]
There is also a 2015 mobile video game based on the book, and a 2018 version for Xbox One and PS4 (Maximum Games). A new mobile version was released in may 2020 by Animoca.[11]
See also
- List of Beast Quest novels
- The Chronicles of Avantia, a Beast Quest spin-off series
- Erin Hunter
- Sea Quest, a Beast Quest spin-off series
Weblinks
References
- ^ Stroud, Clover (12 January 2014). "Rainbow Magic: loathed by parents, loved by children". The Daily Telegraph. London. Retrieved 13 April 2015.
- ^ "How We Work". Working Partners. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ^ http://coolabi.com/our-brands/beast-quest
- ^ "Nicholas Clee on the library charts". The Times. London. 4 February 2012. p. 19. ProQuest document ID 919738907.
- ^ "Beast Quest: Creta the Winged Terror". Booktrust. Retrieved 23 June 2013.
- ^ Mountford, Janet (15 March 2008). "Vedra And Krimon Twin Beasts of Avantia". The Sentinel. Stoke-on-Trent. p. 6. ProQuest document ID 426828385.
- ^ Flett, Kathryn (6 December 2009). "Dragons, wizards and a mother in search of a glass of red... At last, a boys' own bedtime story they actually want to read". The Observer. London. p. 5. ProQuest document ID 250388970.
- ^ Flood, Alison (8 February 2013). "Woman of Steel: US writer in most-borrowed list for 30 years". The Guardian. London. p. 18. ProQuest document ID 1285161231.
- ^ Evans, Sophie (8 March 2013). "Kids get dead excited about author's new horror story". Hull Daily Mail. Hull. p. 20. ProQuest document ID 1315222469.
- ^ Williams, Charlotte (24 August 2012). "Orchard to launch Sea Quest in 2013". The Bookseller: 7.
- ^ Hutchins, Robert. "Coolabi teams with Animoca Brands for new Beast Quest mobile game". Licensing.biz.