Junk

David Porter  |  Reviews
Date posted:  1 Sep 1997
Share Add       

By Melvin Burgess Penguin. 278 pages. £4.99

Prize

There has been something of a furore over the Library Association's award of its Carnegie Medal to Melvin Burgess for Junk. The award - which makes Burgess the latest in a roll of honour that includes C.S. Lewis - was chosen from a shortlist that included several books dealing with bullying and drug addiction.

The judges remarked: 'It's good to know that the books on the Carnegie shortlist will help children explore the dark side of life in the safe, sensitive hands of such excellent authors.' Of Junk, they said: 'Nine narrative voices, each with a chapter of its own, are woven into the harrowing story of Gemma, Tar and their friends' descent into drug addiction. The issues are tough and the style compelling. We particularly admired the sensitive characterisation.'

It's entirely appropriate for Evangelicals Now to be reviewing the book. As winner of the Carnegie and the equally impressive Guardian Fiction Award (a previous prize-winner of which is evangelical writer Ann Pilling), Junk is already appearing on school reading lists, TV and radio programmes about books, and in bookshop displays. Most kids will find somebody or other advising them to read it at some point in the coming months. Many kids will do so.

Share
< Previous article| Reviews| Next article >
Read more articles by David Porter >>

Monthly arts column

Somebody's going to have to help me out on this, but I think that the author of a small book …

Monthly arts column

The memory of John Bunyan the Tinker is surrounded by myths, not least the myth of his uniqueness. The old …

Subscribe

Enjoy our monthly paper and full online access

Find out more

About en

Our vision, values and history.

Read more