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Wednesday's Child

3.78 ( 9 Ratings by Goodreads)
Wednesday's Child

Wednesday's Child

3.78 (9 Ratings by Goodreads)
hardback
Published: 1 April, 2004
Standard worldwide delivery by Wed, July 8 - Mon, July 13
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Condition: USED
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Description

Janet Roberts and her brother James are at the mercy of their father's foul mood swings, especially on Wednesdays, when he returns from his third nightshift of the week, angry and red-eyed, looking for trouble. But they can always lose themselves in Janet's stories of ghosts and gypsies, or go and visit their boozy Aunt Net, who welcomes them with open arms as long as they make a visit to the off licence first. Then, in the course of one summer on their Oxford council estate, everything changes. A young girl is found murdered in the park near their house. James disappears, Aunt Net goes off the rails, and Janet's mother is hospitalised. Janet is left to fight her battles alone, with only her quick wits and vivid imagination to help her through. In this affecting and spirited novel, Eloise Millar brings to life a community, a family and a valiant, lovable heroine. Wednesday's Child is a remarkable and original debut from an exciting new voice in fiction.
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More Details

Type Book
ISBN13 9781844080915
ISBN10 1844080919
Number Of Pages 224
Item Weight 298 g
Product Dimensions 128 x 24 x 214 mm
Publisher / Reseller Virago Press Ltd
Format hardback
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Media Reviews

'Millar's great achievement is that by the end of the book you care about every character in it Millar's other great talent is for depicting childhood exactly as it is Any reader will enjoy this book and the way its spare, clear prose gives a window on to another world' TES

'Millar creates a child's all-seeing, all-accepting world view and brings vividly before you the lives of people who have lost the will to change.' TIMES

'In this horribly believable account of a damaged childhood, Janet's resilience rescues us' Guardian

'A gentle, magical tale, whose heroine will truly bewitch you' STAR

'Millar establishes her own style in an accomplished debut that gives the reader as many chuckles as it does compassionate tears.' VENUE

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GoodReads Reviews

Author's Bio

Eloise Millar was born in Oxford and studied English at Cambridge University. She is currently at work on her second novel, for which she won an Arts Council grant, and which is set in seventeenth-century London.

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