Claudia's concerns are typical of a girl of her age: making and breaking friendships with other girls, playing with her brothers, looking after the family's dog and trying to avoid the household tasks that her mother says she must learn if she is to become a proper Roman wife with a house and slaves to manage. Her father gives her a spare roll of papyrus, and Claudia decides to write a diary, starting with the day in August AD 78 when earth tremors shake the city and she encounters a slave boy, a Briton, who is to become a secret friend. This story recreates the last fourteen months of the doomed city through the experience of a young teenage girl, Claudia. The recent British Museum exhibition will have brought this ancient catastrophe to the attention of many more children, and Sue Reid's story - exciting, well-researched and written in a lively diary form - will appeal to anyone eager to know what it would have been like to be there. I was near the front, and was hugely impressed by the sight of red molten lava moving relentlessly down the side of the volcano. I have a vivid memory of a film show where we sat on benches in what I now realise was probably a converted air-raid shelter. My fascination with Pompeii began at school, at about the age of seven.
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