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  • Published: 4 March 2025
  • ISBN: 9781776953462
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $22.00

Secrets at Red Rocks





When a boy finds a sealskin in a cave, he unlocks an ancient spell that tips him into a terrifying adventure...an award-winning novel for tweens that inspired the Sky NZ Originals TV series!

Selkie mythology meets Wellington's rugged, windswept south coast in this spine-tingling adventure novel, which won the 2013 Esther Glen Medal for Junior Fiction. Now a Sky New Zealand Originals TV series.

Jessie stared at him, hard. ‘It is not a story. It is real. Jake, if you have stolen a sealskin, then whoever it belongs to will be stuck in human form.’ Jake was surprised to see tears form in her eyes. ‘You must put it back.’
‘But that’s the stupidest thing I’ve ever heard!’ said Jake.
‘Jake!’ Jessie shouted. ‘You must put it back.’

Jake has taken a sealskin from Red Rocks and hidden it under his bed, unlocking an ancient
spell that threatens to destroy his family. Can he put things right, before it’s too late?

In Secrets at Red Rocks, the mysterious Celtic myth of the selkies - seal people - meets Aotearoa New Zealand's wild southern landscape and an ordinary boy is thrown into a terrifying adventure tinged with ancient magic. With its beautiful writing and eerie atmosphere, middle-grade readers will be thrilled and moved by this captivating story by the author of The Grimmelings.

Previously published as Red Rocks.

  • Published: 4 March 2025
  • ISBN: 9781776953462
  • Imprint: Penguin
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 256
  • RRP: $22.00

About the author

Rachael King

Rachael King is the author of two novels for adults: The Sound of Butterflies, which won the award for the New Zealand Society of Authors Hubert Church Best First Book Award for Fiction at the 2007 Montana Book Awards and was published in 10 languages, and Magpie Hall.

Her 2012 novel for middle-grade readers, Red Rocks, won the Esther Glen Medal in the LIANZA Awards in 2013, and inspired a Sky New Zealand Originals TV series, Secrets at Red Rocks. The novel will reissue under the television series title in 2025. Her second children's novel, The Grimmelings, was published in 2024 in New Zealand, Australia and the UK. It was one of the top-selling NZ-published children's novels of that year, was awarded a Storylines Notable Junlor Fiction Book, and was long-listed for the UKLA Book Awards 2025.

Daughter of the acclaimed historian and author Michael King, Rachael was born in Hamilton. She has a master's degree in creative writing from the International Institute of Modern Letters at Wellington’s Victoria University. In 2008 she was the Ursula Bethell Writer in residence at Canterbury University.

King’s first novel, The Sound of Butterflies, was greeted with critical acclaim from around the world, her writing variously described as ‘mesmerizing . . . captivating’ (The Washington Post), ‘rich and evocative’ (Financial Times, UK) and ‘opulent’ (Observer, UK), and she was singled out as ‘a writer to watch’ (Publishers Weekly, USA).

In The New Zealand Listener, Eleanor Catton wrote: ‘[Italo] Calvino explores the idea that all great literature exhibits the qualities of Quickness, Lightness, Exactitude, Visibility and Multiplicity. All these qualities inhered in perfect measure in Rachael King’s novel The Sound of Butterflies. The story of traumatised lepidopterist Thomas Edgar had such a quiet and unsettling power that I found myself dreaming of the Amazon for weeks after finishing the book.’

The Australian Literary Review found it ‘engaging and tremendously well-imagined’, ‘a ripping yarn’ with prose that ‘flows as strongly as the Amazon, rich with easy lyricism’, and concluded: ‘This is a complete meal of a novel, ambitious and well planned.’

Her second novel, Magpie Hall, confirmed King as ‘a hugely talented writer’ whose ‘prose is effortless’ (The New Zealand Herald) and who has the reader ‘gripped by the power of her writing’ (North & South). The New Zealand Listener summed it up: ‘With its racy mix of themes — taxidermy, tattoos, gothic novels, cabinets of curiosities, old country houses and ghosts — combined with a couple of mysteries and a good dollop of sex, Magpie Hall romps along at a thoroughly entertaining pace.’ Iain Sharpe, writing in Metro, concluded: ‘An assured performance, it confirms that King is not just a one-off talent but here for the long haul.’

Her first novel for children, Red Rocks, was described as ‘a magical adventure story . . . that children and adults alike will love. Rachael King has taken the Celtic myth of the selkies and transplanted it into a New Zealand setting that kiwi kids will relate to … There is a hint of darkness running throughout the story and you get a feeling of foreboding right from the start.’ (Zac Harding, My Best Friends Are Books). Award-winning children’s writer Phillipa Werry wrote of it: ‘The language is rich, warm and slightly mysterious, like the cover, and the seals themselves are beautifully described as they gambol in the waves and kelp, or dive into the water like a “silky missile”… This is a story of enchantment, but also of a boy finding the inner strength to solve problems, fight bullies, protect his family and conquer his fear.’

She lives in Christchurch with her husband and two sons.

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Praise for Secrets at Red Rocks

Rachael King… works magic in Red Rocks, her first novel for younger readers.

Ann Packer, The Listener

It’s not just a great story, with unexpected twists. It’s also a lovely evocation of that stretch of Wellington coast.

Phillip Matthews, Your Weekend

A must read for readers who love animals, a bit of magic, and stories about family.

Adele Broadbent

It’s the sort of book that you want to read snuggled up in bed because you almost feel the biting wind and the freezing ocean. 5 out of 5 stars.

Zac Harding, My Best Friends Are Books

This is a story of enchantment, but also of a boy finding the inner strength to solve problems, fight bullies, protect his family and conquer his fear.

Phillipa Werry, Beatties Book Blog

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