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From the Carnegie Medal winning author of Lark, comes Henry Tumour - winner of the 2006 BookTrust Teenage Prize.It wasn't my choice: Henry was in charge.As if school bullies and his mum's tofu sandwiches weren't enough for Hector Brunty, he now has another dilemma: a talking brain tumour.Henry Tumour turns out to be the perfect alter-ego, advising Hector on haircuts, high-fashion, and tactics for snogging the best-looking girl in school, Uma Upshaw. Controlling his speech and brain chemicals is one thing, but soon Henry Tumour is trying to make more decisions about Hector's life than he'd like.Can Hector overpower his tumour in order to get what he really wants . . . before they both go under the knife?
CONTRIBUTORS: Anthony McGowan
EAN: 9780099488231
COUNTRY: United Kingdom
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WEIGHT: 223 g
HEIGHT: 198 cm
PUBLISHED BY: Penguin Random House Children's UK
DATE PUBLISHED: 2007-04-05
CITY:
GENRE: JUVENILE FICTION / Health & Daily Living / Diseases, Illnesses & Injuries
WIDTH: 129 cm
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Book Themes:
Children’s / Teenage fiction: General, modern and contemporary fiction
For style and wit, it is head and shoulders above most teen fiction published this year, I loved, loved, loved this book. It's vivid, it's anarchic, it's unbearably cool . . . It's also very, very funny. There were moments when I had to put it down because I was howling with laughter . . . And if so much hilarity weren't enough, it's also very clever, A book to get teenage boys reading for the hell of it . . . A dark and funny book, Definitely the funniest, most obscenely wise book I have read in a long time, Every writer hates to hear the words "stunning new talent" applied to someone else, but in the case of Anthony McGowan nothing else will do
Anthony McGowan was born in Manchester in 1965. Educated at a Catholic comprehensive, he won't say that his character's schooldays are exactly based on his own but he certainly writes from experience. Before turning to writing full-time, Anthony gained a PhD in Philosophy, worked as a nightclub bouncer, an Open University tutor, a journalist and a civil servant. He is married with two children. Henry Tumour is his second novel for teenagers, and is set in the same school as Hellbent, which was shortlisted for the 2006 Branford Boase Award.