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J
Boy
The unforgotten coat : Winner of the 2012 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize
Boyce Cotrell, Frank, 2011Verfügbar |
Ja (1)
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Exemplare gesamt | 1 |
Exemplare verliehen | 0 |
Medienart | Buch |
ISBN | 978-1-4063-4154-6 |
Verfasser | Boyce Cotrell, Frank
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Systematik | J - Jugendbücher in Bearbeitung |
Interessenskreis | englischsprachige Literatur |
Schlagworte | Flüchtlinge, Klassenlektüre, Freundschaft, Preisträger, Flüchtlingskinder, Mongolei, Lektüre 3. Lernjahr, Lektüre, englische Lektüre, Jugendroman in englisch |
Verlag | Walker Books Ltd. |
Ort | London |
Jahr | 2011 |
Umfang | 103 S. |
Altersbeschränkung | keine |
Sprache | englisch |
Verfasserangabe | Frank Boyce Cotrell |
Annotation | Winner of the 2012 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, this is a stunning and magical story of a summer of friendship which also explore the plight of refugees. From the award-winning author of Millions comes a story of friendship in the midst of adversity. Winner of the 2012 Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, this magical and poignant book is enriched by stunning and atmospheric Polaroid photos. Two refugee brothers from Mongolia are determined to fit in with their Liverpool schoolmates, but bring so much of Mongolia to Bootle that their new friend and guide, Julie, is hard-pressed to know truth from fantasy. Told with the humour, warmth and brilliance of detail which characterizes Frank Cottrell Boyce's writing, readers will be transported from the streets of Liverpool to the steppe of Mongolia. Pressestimmen: 'The judges read extensively and intensely in their search for the winner of the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize this year [2012], but decided unanimously that The Unforgotten Coat's great immediacy and humour really set it apart.With his brilliant depiction of two brothers from Mongolia trying to adapt to school in Liverpool while haunted by a fear from home, Frank Cottrell Boyce never preaches to the reader, and judges felt that he writes with such credibility and warmth that his readers will be left wiser when they have finished the story.' Julia Eccleshare |