Sonderbooks Book Review of

The Last of the High Kings

by Kate Thompson

read by Marcella Riordan

The Last of the High Kings

by Kate Thompson
read by Marcella Riordan

Review posted January 16, 2025.
Clipper Audiobooks, 2009. 5 hours, 52 minutes.
Review written December 7, 2024, from a library eaudiobook.
Starred Review

I've been meaning to listen to this book ever since I listened to The New Policeman back in 2011. But in those days, I listened to audiobooks on CD and never as eaudiobooks, but that was the only version the library had of this sequel. I'd been so taken with the Irish music mixed into The New Policeman audiobook that I wasn't going to settle for reading it in print.

Well, sadly The Last of the High Kings doesn't have any Irish music in the audiobook, though it does include the delightful Irish accent of the narrator. We've got the same main character, J. J. Liddy, but fifteen years have passed since he first visited Tir na nOg, and now he's a father with a family.

And his eleven-year-old daughter Jenny never wants to stay indoors and can't seem to follow directions. She can see and talk with the ghost who guards the ancient beacon at the top of the hill. She laughs when he thwarts archaeologists from digging into it. But she can also talk with the pooka who masquerades as a goat, who also seems to have designs on the old beacon.

Meanwhile, their old neighbor Mikey says he's the last of the High Kings of Ireland. He wants to visit the top of the mountain one last time - maybe by helicopter? J. J.'s too distracted to make it happen, but his son Donal tries to see what he can do.

And those are the bare bones of what's going on, but we've got more Irish magic and ultimately the fate of the world depending on some cleverness. But I especially like that the entire Liddy family gets involved in the magic that happens in this book. And there's plenty of music and dancing.