Red Ink
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- 5,99 €
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- 5,99 €
Beschreibung des Verlags
Sometimes lies are safer than the truth
When her mother is knocked down and killed by a London bus, fifteen-year-old Melon Fouraki is left with no family worth mentioning. Her mother, Maria, never did introduce Melon to a 'living, breathing' father. The indomitable Auntie Aphrodite, meanwhile, is hundreds of miles away on a farm in Crete, and is unlikely to be jumping on a plane and coming to East Finchley anytime soon. But at least Melon has 'The Story'. 'The Story' is the Fourakis family fairytale. A story is something. RED INK is a powerful coming-of-age tale about superstition, denial and family myth.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Belief in "The Story" is all that 15-year-old Melon Fouraki has left after her mother is killed by a London bus. Melon's best (and only) friend avoids her, she's miserable at school, and she has no close relatives, so her mother's boyfriend whom she barely knows comes to stay with her. Melon writes down, and irrationally clings to, the story she has often heard about her mother's past, but through revealing chapters that flash forward and backward from the day of the accident, debut author Mayhew skillfully hints at the truths Melon can't yet accept. Melon's anger, guilt, and denial about her mother's death and their relationship while she was alive cause Melon to take her feelings out on everyone around her. She is a prickly and fairly unreliable narrator, but Mayhew provides sufficient backstory to sympathetically illuminate Melon's anguish. The dramatic and painful final events on a trip to her mother's homeland of Crete emphasize the significant mourning and healing Melon still has to do. Mayhew's poetic language and careful handling of a sensitive subject highlight a promising knack for storytelling. Ages 14 up.