A wonderfully written book about family relationships and how we can overcome our pasts and take control of our present and future. A story full of hope and the good things that can happen when we have hope.

mumsnet.com

A compassionate examination of race, class and societal expectation

Financial Times

This is a terrific novel, gripping and complex

- Marilyn Brocklehurst, Bookseller

Se alle

The heart-rending story of two siblings separated in early childhood. Contemporary, compulsive and a brilliant jacket, too

Bookseller

Life-affirming, witty and uplifting... David gets better with every book

Daily Mail

David... adeptly captures the immense pressures faced both by young people from whom everything is expected and those consigned to the rubbish heap when their lives have barely begun

Metro

Heart-rending

Bliss

<i>Salvage</i> is really going to make people sit up and notice

- Books for Keeps, Damian Kelleher

Skilfully written, Salvage marks David as an author of empathy and truthfulness.

- Amanda Craig, The New Statesman

Keren David's writing ... has heart without being sentimental, is skilfully plotted, and its emotional and moral landscapes are nuanced. ... [Salvage is a] gripping ride.

- Linda Buckley-Archer, The Guardian

David has written a sympathetic novel which describes with insight family dysfunction and the effects of being taken away from one's family.

- Rosamund Charlish, The School Librarian

Aidan Jones was my brother. But I couldn't really remember his face. I couldn't remember talking to him or playing with him. He was just a gap, an absence, a missing person.

Before she was adopted by a loving family and raised in a leafy Home Counties town, Cass Montgomery was Cass Jones. Her memories of her birth family disappeared with her name. But when her adopted family starts to break down, a way out comes in the form of a message from her lost brother, Aidan. Having Aidan back in her life is both everything she needs and nothing she expected. Who is this boy who calls himself her brother? And why is he so haunted?

I glance at the paper. There's a big picture on the front page. A girl with dark red hair. A girl with eyes that might have been green or they might have been grey. I sit down and stare at Cass, and it is her, it is. My stolen sister.

Aidan's a survivor. He's survived an abusive stepfather and an uncaring mother. He's survived crowded foster homes and empty bedsits.He's survived to find Cass. If only he can make her understand what it means to be part of his family. . .

Les mer
A heart-rending but compulsively readable look at how the choices our parents make affect our lives . . . for ever
*Major launch title for Atom *Newsletter to 14,000 teen subscribers *Atomics reader review programme with 3,000 teen readers *Social media push *Twinterviews, Q&As, competitions and more!

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780349001388
Publisert
2014
Utgiver
Little, Brown Book Group
Vekt
253 gr
Høyde
196 mm
Bredde
128 mm
Dybde
22 mm
Aldersnivå
Y, 03
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
320

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Keren David is a journalist and YA star who has been shortlisted for The Bookseller's YA Book Prize, the UKLA award and the Branford Boase Award, and nominated five times for the Carnegie Prize. Keren David started out in journalism as a teenage messenger, she trained as a reporter, and then later worked for many national papers before moving to Amsterdam with her family where she studied art history, learned to cycle and failed to learn Dutch. In 2007 she returned to London, and took a creative writing evening class at City University. Her first book, the award-winning When I Was Joe started out as a plot-planning exercise on the course. Keren is Features Editor for a national newspaper, and a Visiting Lecturer at City University. She is working on a musical adaptation of her book Lia's Guide to Winning the Lottery. Cuckoo is Keren's seventh book.