Tom Fletcher • Ages 8–12 • KS2 • 45 questions

The Creakers KS2 Quiz (With Answers)

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Quiz Questions

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Q1 of 45

What strange thing do the children of Whiffington notice at the start of the story?

  • Strange creatures have moved into their gardens
  • Their pets have disappeared
  • All the adults have vanished overnight
  • The town has been covered in darkness

Q2 of 45

What are the Creakers?

  • Creepy creatures who live in the darkness under beds and have stolen all the adults
  • Mechanical robots built to spy on children
  • Ghosts that haunt old houses
  • Friendly monsters who live under beds

Q3 of 45

Where do the Creakers take the adults?

  • To a factory where adults are put to work
  • To a horrible world called the Woleb, which exists below our own
  • Into the sewers beneath the town
  • To a magical realm inside a nearby forest

Q4 of 45

What is the Woleb?

  • A dream world only Creakers can enter
  • A magical forest where Creakers play
  • The dark world beneath ours where Creakers live — the word is 'below' spelled backwards
  • A cave network beneath Whiffington

Q5 of 45

What is the name of the girl who leads the children's adventure?

  • Lucy
  • Molly
  • Zara
  • Emma

Q6 of 45

What is the name of Lucy's friend who helps her?

  • Ella
  • Jake
  • Tommy
  • Norman

Q7 of 45

What is the King of the Creakers called?

  • The Creaker King
  • The Dark One
  • The Shadow King
  • King Creaker

Q8 of 45

What is special about Lucy's father?

  • He died before the story begins and Lucy misses him deeply
  • He is a scientist who studied the Woleb
  • He is the only adult who knows about Creakers
  • He is the mayor of Whiffington

Q9 of 45

How do the children of Whiffington react when the adults first disappear?

  • They celebrate and do whatever they like — sweets, staying up all night, no rules
  • They call the police in the next town
  • They immediately search the town for clues
  • They are terrified and hide inside

Q10 of 45

What defence works against the Creakers?

  • A special song
  • Bright light — Creakers cannot survive in it
  • Loud noise
  • Salt scattered on the ground

Q11 of 45

What does Lucy find that helps her understand the Creakers?

  • A map left by the Creakers themselves
  • A magical book about Whiffington's history
  • A journal written by a child who encountered them before
  • Her father's old sketches and notes about the Woleb

Q12 of 45

How do the Creakers move around?

  • They crawl on all fours using long claws
  • They slither across the ground
  • They fly using dark wings
  • They travel through shadows and darkness wherever there is no light

Q13 of 45

What does Lucy discover about her father's connection to the Creakers?

  • He was the one who originally trapped them in the Woleb
  • He had left notes and a letter about the Creakers that guide Lucy
  • He was taken by the Creakers long before the others
  • He was the King of the Creakers before he died

Q14 of 45

How does the story end for the stolen adults?

  • Some return but some are lost forever
  • They return by themselves once the Creakers are defeated
  • They remain in the Woleb permanently
  • Lucy rescues them and brings them back to Whiffington

Q15 of 45

What format is 'The Creakers' presented in that is unusual for a children's novel?

  • It is written entirely in verse
  • It is written in second person, addressing the reader directly
  • It features illustrations and song lyrics throughout — Tom Fletcher is also a musician
  • It alternates between a diary and a third-person narrative

Q16 of 45

Why are the children of Whiffington initially happy when adults disappear?

  • No rules, no bedtime, no school — freedom feels exciting at first
  • They believe the adults are on holiday
  • They are too young to understand the danger
  • They dislike their parents

Q17 of 45

What makes the Creakers frightening rather than just monstrous?

  • They are completely invisible even in daylight
  • They can read children's minds
  • They are enormous and physically powerful
  • They are intelligent, organised and have been watching children for years

Q18 of 45

How does Lucy's grief for her father shape her character?

  • It makes her timid and afraid to take risks
  • It makes her angry and difficult to get along with
  • It gives her emotional strength and determination — she is used to facing loss and does not give up
  • It means she is already sad so the disappearances affect her less

Q19 of 45

What does the Woleb represent as a story concept?

  • A metaphor for the adult world children never see
  • A scientific alternate dimension
  • The hidden underside of the comfortable world — a dark mirror of normal life where something monstrous lurks
  • A child's nightmare made real

Q20 of 45

Why is light significant in the story?

  • Light is both a weapon and a symbol — it destroys Creakers and represents hope, truth and courage
  • Light is used to communicate between the two worlds
  • Light is simply a practical detail of the setting
  • Light is the source of the Creakers' power

Q21 of 45

What does Lucy's friendship with Norman show about facing fear?

  • That boys are braver than girls
  • That facing fear with a friend makes it bearable — courage is shared, not solitary
  • That friendship makes people reckless and less careful
  • That you need adult help to face real danger

Q22 of 45

How does Fletcher use the concept of what lives under your bed?

  • To take a universal childhood fear — the dark under the bed — and build an entire mythology from it
  • To show that childhood fears are always irrational
  • To create a straightforward horror story for children
  • To comment on the parent-child relationship

Q23 of 45

What does the children-running-wild section of the story show?

  • That the children are selfish and do not miss their parents
  • That children are happier without adults
  • That freedom without responsibility quickly becomes hollow — something is missing even when rules disappear
  • That children are naturally chaotic and need adult control

Q24 of 45

How does the discovery of Lucy's father's notes change the story?

  • It transforms the adventure into a personal quest — Lucy is not just any child, this is her story
  • It makes Lucy overconfident and leads to mistakes
  • It explains where all the Creakers originally came from
  • It reveals a conspiracy going on for generations

Q25 of 45

What does the King of the Creakers want from the adults?

  • Their fear — it feeds the Creakers
  • Company — the Creakers are lonely
  • Their memories and dreams
  • Labour — the adults work in the Woleb

Q26 of 45

How does the Woleb setting create atmosphere?

  • It is a dark inversion of the familiar world — everything is wrong, backwards and deeply unsettling
  • It is cold and mechanical
  • It is beautiful but dangerous like a fairy tale forest
  • It is empty and silent

Q27 of 45

What makes Lucy a strong protagonist?

  • She is brave, resourceful and emotionally driven — grief has made her resilient rather than broken
  • She is the cleverest child in Whiffington
  • She has special powers inherited from her father
  • She alone can see Creakers in daylight

Q28 of 45

How does the format with songs and illustrations affect the reader?

  • It makes the book harder to follow
  • It makes the scary parts feel less frightening
  • It creates an immersive, atmospheric experience — the songs add layers of creepiness that prose alone cannot achieve
  • It is mainly marketing to link the book to Fletcher's music career

Q29 of 45

What are the Creakers attracted to that allows them to thrive?

  • The sound of children crying at night
  • Creakers arrive wherever adults are absent, regardless of what children do
  • The mess, darkness and disorder that children create under their beds — this is what draws Creakers and allows them to hide
  • The nightmares children have when they are afraid

Q30 of 45

What does the ending suggest about the balance between the ordinary world and the Woleb?

  • The children have permanently made the world safer
  • The Woleb is sealed but the Creakers are not destroyed — the threat remains, kept at bay by light and courage
  • Everyone forgets what happened and life returns completely to normal
  • The danger is completely gone once the adults return

Q31 of 45

How does Fletcher use the absence of adults to explore what childhood freedom actually means?

  • He suggests children are happier without parental authority
  • He reveals that freedom without love and safety is not freedom at all — the celebration becomes emptiness and fear
  • He argues children need independence to mature
  • He uses it purely as a plot device to isolate the children

Q32 of 45

What does the Woleb as a mirrored world beneath ours suggest thematically?

  • That every comfortable reality rests on something dark and hidden — a metaphor for anxieties beneath normal family life
  • That children can perceive truths adults ignore
  • That parallel worlds exist in scientific fact
  • That the supernatural is more real than the natural

Q33 of 45

How does Lucy's father function as an absent presence throughout the narrative?

  • His absence shapes Lucy's entire emotional arc — grief drives her into the Woleb and his knowledge guides her survival, making him more present in death than many living characters are in life
  • He is merely backstory that explains Lucy's personality
  • He is a narrative device to provide exposition about the Woleb's history
  • He represents lost childhood innocence

Q34 of 45

In what ways does 'The Creakers' subvert the conventional monster story?

  • By revealing the monsters are imaginary
  • By setting the story in the present day rather than a fantasy realm
  • By making the monsters a consequence of adult absence — they thrive precisely when the protective adult world disappears, inverting the usual narrative where monsters threaten from outside
  • By making the monsters sympathetic victims

Q35 of 45

How does Fletcher use the multi-modal format to deepen thematic meaning?

  • The songs are simply marketing material
  • The layered format mirrors the layered reality of the story — the Woleb beneath the surface, the songs embedded in the narrative — creating a reading experience that itself has hidden depths
  • The format makes complex themes accessible to younger readers
  • The illustrations carry narrative information the text deliberately withholds

Q36 of 45

What does the children's initial celebration when adults vanish reveal about the parent-child relationship?

  • That children fundamentally resent parental authority
  • That modern parents are too strict
  • That children both chafe against adult rules and depend on adult love — the celebration is genuine but short-lived because love matters more than freedom
  • That children are naturally irresponsible without supervision

Q37 of 45

How does light as both weapon and symbol function in the novel's moral framework?

  • Light symbolises adult authority that must be restored
  • Light is simply a practical plot mechanism
  • Light represents all that opposes the Woleb — truth, love, courage and family warmth — making the battle between light and dark a moral rather than just physical conflict
  • Light is a scientific fact about Creakers' biology with no deeper meaning

Q38 of 45

What does Lucy's journey into the Woleb suggest about grief and how children process loss?

  • That children should be protected from grief
  • That children recover from loss more quickly than adults
  • That grief drives people to take dangerous and irrational risks
  • That grief, when not suppressed, can become a source of courage — Lucy's familiarity with loss allows her to enter darkness that would paralyse others

Q39 of 45

How does Fletcher construct the Creakers as a social organism rather than individual monsters?

  • By showing them organised under a king, sharing a world and operating according to rules — they are a mirror society to the human one above, making them philosophically unsettling
  • By making them incapable of individual thought
  • By showing they communicate through a hive mind
  • By giving each Creaker a distinct personality

Q40 of 45

What does the King of the Creakers represent as a villain?

  • A representation of abusive adult authority
  • A ruler of a broken dark society who takes what he needs from the world above — he represents the hunger at the heart of fear itself
  • A chaotic force of pure greed with no deeper motivation or backstory
  • A misguided leader who can be reformed

Q41 of 45

How does the novel use the domestic setting of Whiffington to heighten horror?

  • By using the town as a comic backdrop to undercut genuine fear
  • By contrasting the horror with a boring backdrop
  • By establishing a recognisably ordinary English town — making the intrusion of the Woleb feel like a violation of safety itself
  • By making Whiffington itself sinister from the beginning

Q42 of 45

What does Tommy's friendship with Lucy suggest about facing existential threat?

  • That one brave person can face anything alone
  • That friendship weakens individual resolve
  • That courage and survival are fundamentally communal — no individual is sufficient against the darkness and the story rejects the solitary hero myth
  • That only children with personal stakes can be truly motivated

Q43 of 45

How does Fletcher's background as a songwriter influence the novel's approach to fear?

  • It makes the novel more commercial and less serious
  • His background is irrelevant to the literary quality
  • It means he prioritises atmosphere over character development
  • Fear is treated as something with rhythm and pattern — the songs give voice to it in a way that exposes its emotional structure rather than just its narrative function

Q44 of 45

What is the significance of 'Creakers' being named after the sound under the bed?

  • It signals the creatures are not truly dangerous, just noisy
  • It is intended to be humorous
  • It is a simple naming decision for a children's book
  • It grounds the supernatural in a universally familiar childhood experience — the name itself bridges irrational childhood fear and the terrifying reality the story constructs

Q45 of 45

How does the resolution balance triumph and ongoing vigilance?

  • The adults return and Lucy succeeds, but the Woleb remains — the ending argues that darkness is not eliminated but managed, and courage must be maintained rather than celebrated as a final victory
  • The ending is deliberately ambiguous to allow for sequels
  • The resolution is too neat and undermines the thematic seriousness
  • Complete triumph — the Woleb is destroyed and the threat ended

All Answers

  1. Q1: All the adults have vanished overnight
  2. Q2: Creepy creatures who live in the darkness under beds and have stolen all the adults
  3. Q3: To a horrible world called the Woleb, which exists below our own
  4. Q4: The dark world beneath ours where Creakers live — the word is 'below' spelled backwards
  5. Q5: Lucy
  6. Q6: Tommy
  7. Q7: The Creaker King
  8. Q8: He died before the story begins and Lucy misses him deeply
  9. Q9: They celebrate and do whatever they like — sweets, staying up all night, no rules
  10. Q10: Bright light — Creakers cannot survive in it
  11. Q11: Her father's old sketches and notes about the Woleb
  12. Q12: They travel through shadows and darkness wherever there is no light
  13. Q13: He had left notes and a letter about the Creakers that guide Lucy
  14. Q14: Lucy rescues them and brings them back to Whiffington
  15. Q15: It features illustrations and song lyrics throughout — Tom Fletcher is also a musician
  16. Q16: No rules, no bedtime, no school — freedom feels exciting at first
  17. Q17: They are intelligent, organised and have been watching children for years
  18. Q18: It gives her emotional strength and determination — she is used to facing loss and does not give up
  19. Q19: The hidden underside of the comfortable world — a dark mirror of normal life where something monstrous lurks
  20. Q20: Light is both a weapon and a symbol — it destroys Creakers and represents hope, truth and courage
  21. Q21: That facing fear with a friend makes it bearable — courage is shared, not solitary
  22. Q22: To take a universal childhood fear — the dark under the bed — and build an entire mythology from it
  23. Q23: That freedom without responsibility quickly becomes hollow — something is missing even when rules disappear
  24. Q24: It transforms the adventure into a personal quest — Lucy is not just any child, this is her story
  25. Q25: Labour — the adults work in the Woleb
  26. Q26: It is a dark inversion of the familiar world — everything is wrong, backwards and deeply unsettling
  27. Q27: She is brave, resourceful and emotionally driven — grief has made her resilient rather than broken
  28. Q28: It creates an immersive, atmospheric experience — the songs add layers of creepiness that prose alone cannot achieve
  29. Q29: The mess, darkness and disorder that children create under their beds — this is what draws Creakers and allows them to hide
  30. Q30: The Woleb is sealed but the Creakers are not destroyed — the threat remains, kept at bay by light and courage
  31. Q31: He reveals that freedom without love and safety is not freedom at all — the celebration becomes emptiness and fear
  32. Q32: That every comfortable reality rests on something dark and hidden — a metaphor for anxieties beneath normal family life
  33. Q33: His absence shapes Lucy's entire emotional arc — grief drives her into the Woleb and his knowledge guides her survival, making him more present in death than many living characters are in life
  34. Q34: By making the monsters a consequence of adult absence — they thrive precisely when the protective adult world disappears, inverting the usual narrative where monsters threaten from outside
  35. Q35: The layered format mirrors the layered reality of the story — the Woleb beneath the surface, the songs embedded in the narrative — creating a reading experience that itself has hidden depths
  36. Q36: That children both chafe against adult rules and depend on adult love — the celebration is genuine but short-lived because love matters more than freedom
  37. Q37: Light represents all that opposes the Woleb — truth, love, courage and family warmth — making the battle between light and dark a moral rather than just physical conflict
  38. Q38: That grief, when not suppressed, can become a source of courage — Lucy's familiarity with loss allows her to enter darkness that would paralyse others
  39. Q39: By showing them organised under a king, sharing a world and operating according to rules — they are a mirror society to the human one above, making them philosophically unsettling
  40. Q40: A ruler of a broken dark society who takes what he needs from the world above — he represents the hunger at the heart of fear itself
  41. Q41: By establishing a recognisably ordinary English town — making the intrusion of the Woleb feel like a violation of safety itself
  42. Q42: That courage and survival are fundamentally communal — no individual is sufficient against the darkness and the story rejects the solitary hero myth
  43. Q43: Fear is treated as something with rhythm and pattern — the songs give voice to it in a way that exposes its emotional structure rather than just its narrative function
  44. Q44: It grounds the supernatural in a universally familiar childhood experience — the name itself bridges irrational childhood fear and the terrifying reality the story constructs
  45. Q45: The adults return and Lucy succeeds, but the Woleb remains — the ending argues that darkness is not eliminated but managed, and courage must be maintained rather than celebrated as a final victory
Next: Charlie and the Chocolate Factory →

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