Bookbot

I'm the King of the Castle

Auteurs

Boekbeoordeling

Parameters

  • 232bladzijden
  • 9 uur lezen

Meer over het boek

'I didn't want you to come here.' So says the note that the boy Edmund Hooper passes to Charles Kingshaw upon his arrival at Warings. But, young Kingshaw and his mother have come to live with Hooper and his father in the ugly, isolated Victorian house for good. To Hooper, Kingshaw is an intruder, a boy to be subtly persecuted, and Kingshaw finds that even the most ordinary object can be turned by Hooper into a source of terror. In Hang Wood their roles are briefly reversed, but Kingshaw knows Hooper will never let him be. Kingshaw cannot win, not in the last resort. He knows it, and so does Hooper. And the worst is still to come...This extraordinary, evocative novel boils over with the terrors of childhood and won the Somerset Maugham Award.

Een boek kopen

I'm the King of the Castle, Susan Hill

Taal
Jaar van publicatie
2005
product-detail.submit-box.info.binding
(Paperback)
We hebben dit exemplaar niet meer.
of
Beschikbare uitgave bekijken

Betaalmethoden

3,5
Oké
2965 Beoordelingen

We missen je recensie hier.

Taal
Engels
Auteurs
Susan Hill
Uitgever
Cornelsen
Jaar van publicatie
2005
Formaat
Paperback
Aantal pagina's
232
ISBN10
3464063275
ISBN13
9783464063279
Reeks
Beoordeling
3,5 van 5
Aantekening
'I didn't want you to come here.' So says the note that the boy Edmund Hooper passes to Charles Kingshaw upon his arrival at Warings. But, young Kingshaw and his mother have come to live with Hooper and his father in the ugly, isolated Victorian house for good. To Hooper, Kingshaw is an intruder, a boy to be subtly persecuted, and Kingshaw finds that even the most ordinary object can be turned by Hooper into a source of terror. In Hang Wood their roles are briefly reversed, but Kingshaw knows Hooper will never let him be. Kingshaw cannot win, not in the last resort. He knows it, and so does Hooper. And the worst is still to come...This extraordinary, evocative novel boils over with the terrors of childhood and won the Somerset Maugham Award.