Born Free by Laura Hird, , 1841950483 Search discount cheap book, Compare Book prices, Find Lowest Price
 Compare book prices at 85 bookstores
Add to Favorite Tell a Friend Link to Us Contact Us Help Home Wish List New!
us online discount book stores United States | canada online books for less Canada | Rare/Out-of-print Books

Born Free, cheap new, used books  Born Free ("Rebel Inc")
Author: Laura Hird  
ISBN: 1841950483   /   Paperback
Publisher: Canongate Books   /   2000-06-27
List Price: £7.99
Similar Books   More Details from Amazon.co.uk
Compare new, used book prices

Editorial Reviews:
"It's probably easier to be born free when you live on a massive nature reserve in the middle of Africa and have lions for pets". Easier, anyway, than when you live in an Edinburgh tenement with a neurotic dog: "Dad was engaged to a lassie called Jan, before he met Mum. He was only allowed to get a dog on the condition he got a bitch and called her that, because in Mum's opinion, well, you know?"

Jake is a computer games obsessive whose other hobbies include: 1) tormenting a teacher who wears "revolting tight trousers that make his balls look like a ballet dancer's" and pungent aftershave and, therefore, must be gay; and 2) masturbating over defaced pictures of Kate Moss in his mum's old issues of Marie Claire. Older sister Joni is 15, shoplifts from British Home Stores (because it's easy), skives off school, alternately envies and falls out with best mate Rosie and is desperate to lose her virginity before she hits 16. Mum (Angie) is a frowsy, late-thirtysomething who snores, works in a bookies and suspects that her (younger) manager Raymond just might be flirting with her. And Dad (Vic) is a gentle hippy of a bus driver who missed out on university because Angie got pregnant, is helpless in the face of his children's teenage angst and his wife's mid-life crisis and who can't get it up.

Narrated by each family member in turn (the characterisation is superb, the voices pitch-perfect), Laura Hird's accomplished debut novel is a cross between James Kelman's Busconductor Hines, Alan Warner's Morvern Callar and the Pogues' Fairytale of New York. The result is a gritty, witty, eventful and surprisingly warm-hearted tale. --Lisa Gee

"It's probably easier to be born free when you live on a massive nature reserve in the middle of Africa and have lions for pets." Easier, anyway, than when you live in an Edinburgh tenement with a neurotic dog: "Dad was engaged to a lassie called Jan, before he met Mum. He was only allowed to get a dog on the condition he got a bitch and called her that, because in Mum's opinion, well, you know?"

Jake is a computer games obsessive whose other hobbies include 1)tormenting a teacher who wears "revolting tight trousers that make his balls look like a ballet dancer's" and pungent aftershave and, therefore, must be gay and 2) masturbating over defaced pictures of Kate Moss in his mum's old issues of Marie Claire. Older sister Joni is 15, shoplifts from British Home Stores (because it's easy), skives off school, alternately envies and falls out with best mate Rosie and is desperate to lose her virginity before she hits 16. Mum (Angie) is a frowsy, late-thirty-something who snores, works in a bookies and suspects that her (younger) manager Raymond just might be flirting with her. And Dad (Vic) is a gentle hippy of a bus driver who missed out on university because Angie got pregnant, is helpless in the face of his children's teenage angst, his wife's mid-life crisis and who can't get it up.

Narrated by each family member in turn (the characterisation is superb, the voices pitch-perfect), Laura Hird's accomplished debut novel is a cross between James Kelman's Busconductor Hines, Alan Warner's Morvern Callar and the Pogues' Fairytale of New York. The result is a gritty, witty, eventful and surprisingly warm-hearted tale. --Lisa Gee


Customer Reviews:
Grimly compelling     
This is a story of a working class Edinburgh family in trouble and heading for a crisis. It unfolds from the points of view of the family members who get a chapter in turn to tell their stories. It is pretty grim stuff, dad a depressive bus driver, mum bored & frustrated, 15 year old Joni shoplifting and desperate to lose her virginity & the youngest Jake being bullied at school. Hird makes it work by making them believable, not entirety unsympathetic an adding a vein of dark humor. Not a jolly read but one that will hold you right to the end.
Gritty, real-life perspectives of urban Scottish family     
A book which grips your imagination immediately. The four main characters make up a family in a poor urban area of Edinburgh. They are all equally real, accessible, tragic and desperate. Each speaks from their own perspective, in turn. The contempt each has for the other is palpable. A novel which reads like journalism - you know these people exist. This is a Mike Leigh film in book form. I don't remember reading anything so real in a very long time.
View more reviews or product details from Amazon.co.uk


 

            

 

Looking for Rare, Out of Print Books? Click here


About Us
 Recommend Us Bookmark Link To Us Wish List New!


us online discount book stores United States | buy uk books online United Kingdom | canada online books for less Canada

(c) 2004 BookFinder4u UK - Search Cheap new, used, out of print books.


Suggestion Box:
Let us know anything you like or don't like about this website.