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Key points

The front cover of a book with the title Rooftoppers by Katherine Rundell. The image shows two figures - a boy and a girl - sat on a rooftop in Paris. The girl has long, white hair. In the background is the Eiffel Tower, the moon, trees and musical notes.
  • Rooftoppers was written by Katherine Rundell and published in 2013. It is set in the period.

  • The story is about a girl called Sophie who was found floating in an empty cello case after a shipwreck.

  • Growing up with her guardian, Charles, Sophie is convinced that her mother is still alive and sets out to find her.

  • Sophie鈥檚 search takes her to the rooftops of Paris where she learns about identity, hope and courage.

The front cover of a book with the title Rooftoppers by Katherine Rundell. The image shows two figures - a boy and a girl - sat on a rooftop in Paris. The girl has long, white hair. In the background is the Eiffel Tower, the moon, trees and musical notes.
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Plot

An image showing the 11 key moment from Rooftoppers by Katherine Rundell. The first image shows a baby wrapped in sheet music in a cello case. The case is floating in the sea. The second image shows Charles holding hands with Sophie when she was young. The third image shows Sophie climbing a tree. The fourth image shows the silhouettes of two men pointing towards an orphanage. The fifth image shows a green steam train. The sixth image shows the front of an old-fashioned music shop. There are musical instruments in the window. Image seven shows Sophie sat on a rooftop next to Matteo. The eight image shows a stern looking police officer sat behind a desk. Image nine shows a filing cabinet with one drawer open. There is a book on the floor and an open lock. Image ten shows the silhouettes of four children on a rooftop. One is raising their fist. The final image shows Sophie鈥檚 mother playing the cello on a rooftop. All the images are connected together with musical notes.

After a ship sinks, a baby is found floating in a cello case and is rescued by Charles Maxim, another passenger from the ship. Charles names the baby Sophie and decides to raise her.

When Sophie is 12, the National Childcare Agency decide that Charles is not raising her properly and arrange to send Sophie to an orphanage. Sophie finds a Paris address inside her cello case, which she believes belonged to her mother. She and Charles decide to go to Paris to escape the authorities and find her mother.

In Paris, Sophie and Charles visit the address they found in the cello case. They find out that it was owned by a woman called Vivienne Vert.

Sophie meets a boy called Matteo. Matteo is also an orphan and lives on the rooftops to avoid being found. He agrees to help Sophie in her search.

Charles and Sophie go to the police station to find out if Vivienne was on the records of the sinking ship. The police refuse to let them see the ship鈥檚 records, which makes Charles and Sophie suspicious.

Matteo and some other rooftop children help Sophie to break into the police files. They find out that all the ship's musicians were recorded as being men. However, one of the musicians, called George Green, looks very similar to Sophie and is wearing a woman's shirt in a photograph.

In the Victorian period, women wouldn鈥檛 have been allowed to work as musicians, so Sophie鈥檚 mother must have disguised herself as a man so that she could work. The ship鈥檚 records contain an address for 鈥楪eorge鈥.

After a dangerous encounter with a group of violent Rooftoppers called the gariers, Sophie and Matteo are joined by Charles. The three visit George鈥檚 address, unsure what they will find.

On the rooftop, a woman is playing a cello. She is clearly Sophie鈥檚 mother, as they both have the same unusual hair colour, and the two are reunited.

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Characters

A man wearing a waistcoat holds the hand of a young girl with white hair.

Sophie

Sophie has a strong sense of her own identity. She has "hair the colour of lightning", chooses to wear trousers instead of skirts, climbs trees and plays the cello.

Sophie is brave, strong and determined to find her mother.

A man wearing a waistcoat holds the hand of a young girl with white hair.

Charles Maxim

Charles is clever and unusual. For instance, he and Sophie use books instead of plates, and he let Sophie sleep on the top of her wardrobe when she was young.

Charles doesn鈥檛 think that it鈥檚 important for Sophie to behave like other young Victorian girls. He thinks it is more important for Sophie to be happy.

He supports Sophie's search for her mother and his motto is:

never ignore a possible.
Sophie and Matteo sit on a rooftop in Paris. The Eiffel Tower and moon are behind them.

Matteo

Matteo is independent and brave. He is afraid of losing his freedom and being taken into an orphanage so he refuses to come down from the rooftops.

He is very knowledgeable about the city of Paris and its people.

Although he appears tough, Matteo is kind to Sophie and uses his skills and knowledge to help her find her mother.

Sophie and Matteo sit on a rooftop in Paris. The Eiffel Tower and moon are behind them.

Vivienne Vert

Vivienne is Sophie鈥檚 mother. She also plays the cello and has "hair the colour of lightning".

Vivienne is determined and brave, like Sophie. She took the name 'George Green' and disguised herself as a man so that she could play in a ship鈥檚 orchestra. When the ship sank, she was separated from her daughter.

Other important characters

Other important characters are Miss Eliot, 骋茅谤补谤诲, Anastasia and Safi.

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Themes

Themes are the main ideas that appear repeatedly in a novel. Some of the important themes in Rooftoppers are:

  • Identity
  • Hope
  • Courage

Identity

A girl with long, messy, white hair, wearing a blue jumper and brown trousers, climbing a tree.

Rooftoppers has a strong message that individual identity is more important than behaving in the way other people expect you to behave.

Sophie has a strong sense of her own identity. Charles supports this, even when her preferences go against what Victorian society expected from a young girl.

For example:

  • He lets Sophie climb trees because being high up makes her feel safe
  • He buys her a cello when she falls in love with the sound at a concert
  • He lets her wear trousers and shirts rather than dresses

Both Charles and Sophie are happy to be themselves and don't worry about fitting in.

The same is true for the friends Sophie meets in Paris. Matteo, Anastasia, Safi and 骋茅谤补谤诲 live unusual lives but they live in a way that allows them the freedom to be themselves.

A girl with long, messy, white hair, wearing a blue jumper and brown trousers, climbing a tree.

Which character does not approve of Sophie's identity?

Hope

Although it seems very unlikely that Sophie鈥檚 mother survived the ship sinking, Sophie never loses hope that she will find her.

Charles teaches Sophie to hope. He tells her that 鈥渁lmost impossible means still possible鈥 and that you should 鈥渘ever ignore a possible鈥.

Sophie repeats this often throughout the book.

Courage

Sophie is a brave character. For example:

  • At the start of the novel, she resists Miss Eliot's ideas about how young Victorian girls should behave.

  • She follows her instincts and travels to Paris, even though the chances of finding her mother are slim.

  • When she meets Matteo, she is determined to be able to run across the rooftops like him. She learns to ignore her fear in order to jump between roofs and climb walls.

  • When she is balanced on a tightrope between two buildings, Sophie realises her own strength. She learns that by being brave she can also be free.

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Language

Writers choose words and phrases carefully when they write. Readers can look closely at texts to think about how and why the writer made these choices.

Similes

A uses 'like' or 'as' to make a comparison between two things.

When Sophie and Charles are travelling to Paris on the train, Sophie chooses a strawberry biscuit that "glinted like rubies" and tasted "like adventure". This suggests that Sophie is trying new things that might be unexpected but which are exciting.

The word "rubies" has of treasure, suggesting that she will find something precious in Paris, perhaps her mother.

Metaphors

A is a figure of speech that describes something by saying it is something else.

When baby Sophie first sees Charles, he is described as "night-time with a speaking voice" and "if ink had vocal chords". "Night-time" and "ink" both have of darkness, so these metaphors could suggest that baby Sophie was uncertain and fearful at first.

Alternatively, "night-time" and "ink" might suggest comfort, like a lullaby or bed-time story would. Perhaps Rundell wanted to show how Charles' presence comforted baby Sophie.

A woman with long white hair sits on a rooftop playing a cello. She is wearing trousers and the moon can be seen in the night sky behind her.

Personification

When Sophie first hears cello music, the narrator says "it plucked at her fingers and feet". This is an example of because music is given human characteristics.

The verb '"plucked" suggests that the music plays Sophie rather than the other way round, showing how Sophie is physically affected by the music.

A woman with long white hair sits on a rooftop playing a cello. She is wearing trousers and the moon can be seen in the night sky behind her.

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Structure

Structure refers to how written text is organised 鈥 the way the story is ordered and shaped.

Chronological order

Rooftoppers is told from start to finish, in the order that events happen. It begins with Sophie鈥檚 rescue and then quickly covers the first 12 years of her life to give the reader enough background to understand the setting and the characters.

When she is 12 and the authorities decide she cannot stay with Charles, the real adventure begins.

A cello against a white background
Image caption,
A cello

Symbols

A symbol is an object, person, image or event used to represent something bigger. For example, in Rooftoppers, the cello represents Sophie's mother.

When symbols are repeated throughout a text, they are called motifs. The repetition of these symbols shows that they are important.

The cello, and particularly Faur茅鈥檚 Requiem played quickly on a cello, is a motif strongly associated with Sophie鈥檚 mother and is what eventually leads Sophie to her.

A cello against a white background
Image caption,
A cello

What other motifs are used in Rooftoppers?

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Context

The in which a novel was written can sometimes tell you more about its themes, message and meaning.

Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, France circa 1890
Image caption,
Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, France circa 1890

The Victorian period

Katherine Rundell doesn鈥檛 specify the exact historical time in which Rooftoppers is set, although the expectations on women, the use of train travel, lack of technology and references to Faur茅鈥檚 Requiem suggest that it is set in the later era.

Victorian expectations of women were limited. For example:

  • Girls were expected to wear skirts or dresses and have long hair.
  • They should behave in a 'ladylike' way, which means they should be quiet and polite.
  • Girls were often educated at home in practical things like cooking and needlework.
  • It wasn鈥檛 compulsory to send girls to primary school until 1883, so many girls weren鈥檛 taught to read and write beyond what they needed to know at home.

Miss Eliot reflects this Victorian attitude. She disapproves of Sophie's appearance and behaviour and says she would "be embarrassed to be seen with her".

Sophie defies Victorian expectations and behaves in the way which feels natural for her instead. The book clearly shows that this is the best thing to do. If Sophie behaved in the way that Miss Eliot told her to, she would have been very unhappy.

Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, France circa 1890
Image caption,
Notre Dame Cathedral in Paris, France circa 1890
A black and white photograph taken in 1889 showing the Eiffel Tower and the rooftops of Paris
Image caption,
The Eiffel Tower and the rooftops of Paris, 1889
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