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The Boy with the Tiger's Heart

Paperback

Main Details

Title The Boy with the Tiger's Heart
Authors and Contributors      By (author) Linda Coggin
Physical Properties
Format:Paperback
Pages:240
Dimensions(mm): Height 197,Width 15
ISBN/Barcode 9781471404580
ClassificationsDewey:823.92
Audience
Children / Juvenile

Publishing Details

Publisher Hot Key Books
Imprint Hot Key Books
Publication Date 5 February 2015
Publication Country United Kingdom

Description

The call of the wild is powerfully realised in this thrillingly evocative modern-day fable A girl raised in the wild, a desperate race for freedom and a boy with a fiercely guarded secret... When Nona's guardian kills himself, she is immediately suspected of murdering him. In a world where nature and darkness are feared, where wild animals are held captive and cities are illuminated by permanent light, who will believe her innocence? Nona must flee with her only friend - a bear who is strangely human. In their desperate attempt to escape capture, Nona and her bear encounter two strange boys, Caius and Jay. Together, the four of them will hide, and fight, and make the deadliest of enemies in their desperate race to a forbidden place called The Edge - where nature is unrestrained, where there is light and shade, forest and mountain, and where there are no shackles or boundaries. A poetic, haunting and unforgettable modern fable about nature, society, and what it is that makes us human.

Author Biography

Linda Coggin taught horse riding in the West Indies before studying mime in Paris and Czechoslovakia. Forming a small theatre company, they played the fringe theatres and the alternative cabaret circuits of Europe. She appeared in Ken Russell's film Gothic as the mechanical doll. She worked as an actor for several years and presented The Home Show for Thames Television.Linda writes and performs her own poetry; her collection entitled DOG DAYS has been published. She lives in Wiltshire with her family and numerous animals. Follow Linda at www.lindacogsblog.blogspot.co.uk.

Reviews

Written, unusually, in the present tense, this dystopian fable expresses an idea about the way the relationship between nature and society could develop. * Booktrust *