Stuart Dredge 

Angry Birds maker Rovio gets into young-adult fiction with Storm Sisters

‘High action pirate adventure with a female twist’ set to debut by early 2016, as games firm continues its expansion into books
  
  

Storm Sisters is a new series of young-adult books published by Rovio.
Storm Sisters is a new series of young-adult books published by Rovio. Photograph: PR

There are no egg-stealing pigs in the latest spin-off from games firm Rovio Entertainment. Angry Birds? Well, given that it’s a series of young-adult (YA) novels with a piratical theme, perhaps there’ll be a few parrots.

Storm Sisters is the latest project from the Finnish company, as it expands further into the book publishing world. Written by Mintie Das, the first novel The Sinking World will be published in late 2015 or early 2016.

The book is one of 12 being showcased at the Books at Berlinale event in February, which touts upcoming books to film companies for possible adaptation.

Rovio is describing Storm Sisters books as “a high action pirate adventure with a female twist”, focusing on five 11-17 year-old girls disguised as “girl pirates” in the late 18th century.

“After the tragic events of what has become known as the Day of Destruction - a day when they were intended to die along with their families - Charlie, Sadie, Liu, Raquel and Ingela sail the high seas all alone. In the 1780s, in a world filled with pirates, hurricanes and disbelievers, that’s not an easy task. What’s more important: Survival or truth?”

A second novel, The Frozen Seas, will follow the first. Author Das lives in Angry Birds’ home city of Helsinki, having been born in India then raised in the US.

This being the company behind Angry Birds, are there apps for that? Nothing has been announced so far, but it would be surprising if Rovio wasn’t planning to take the Storm Sisters tales to smartphones and tablets in some form – either games or book-apps.

This is far from the first foray into book publishing for the company, though. Angry Birds has spawned a series of books and comics, including some published through partnerships with Penguin and National Geographic.

“It’s important for kids to read. I don’t care where they read or how they get interested in reading. It’s more important that they do get interested in it,” Rovio’s vice president of book publishing Sanna Lukander told the Guardian in February 2013.

Storm Sisters also represents the latest attempt by Rovio to build new brands beyond Angry Birds – this time leading with print books, rather than mobile games. It is also another example of Rovio targeting girls in particular, following 2014’s Angry Birds Stella game and animation series.

Angry Birds has lost 63m players since 2012 (but still has 200m)

 

Leave a Comment

Required fields are marked *

*

*