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A Bridge to the Stars
| Our Price |
$ 46.36
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| Retail Value |
$ 57.95 |
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| You Save |
$ 11.59 (20%) |
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| Item Number |
721108 |
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Item Description...
Product Description One of the world's best-selling authors has written a moving story about a teenager's life in Northern Sweden.
12-year-old Joel lives with his father in the cold northern part of Sweden. At night he often sneaks out of the house to look for a lonely dog he has seen from his window. On the bridge across the icy river he starts a secret society and has adventures. But one night he discovers that his father's bed is also empty, and so he will have to come to terms with his father's newfound love. The harsh reality of Joel's world comes vividly to life and leaves the reader spellbound.
From the Trade Paperback edition.
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Item Specifications...
Dimensions: Length: 7.3" Width: 6.4" Height: 1.1" Weight: 0.5 lbs.
Binding CD
Release Date May 30, 2009
ISBN 1921415207 EAN 9781921415203
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Availability 0 units.
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Reviews - What do our customers think?
 | Story telling at it's best! Jul 18, 2008 |
| I read this book to my 12 year son...it is a great story with wonderful characters, we both enjoyed it enormously! | | |  | A thoughtful story Feb 21, 2008 |
Like many American readers, I've recently discovered Henning Mankell. The Swedish author of a series of adult mystery novels featuring Inspector Kurt Wallander, Mankell has been enormously popular in Europe for a number of years, although his work is only slowly gaining momentum here in the States. Now Delacorte Press has released A BRIDGE TO THE STARS, the first of Mankell's novels for young adults, which, although very different from his Wallander series of police procedurals, nevertheless are worthwhile for younger American audiences to discover as well.
Eleven-year-old Joel Gustafsson is full of questions. Sometimes he feels like his life is just one big mystery. Why does his father, a former sailor who loves to tell stories of exotic places and longs for the sea, now work as a lumberjack in far northern Sweden, about as far from the sea as one can get? "How could he find any satisfaction in going into the forest every day to chop down trees when he'd never succeed in felling enough for him to be able to glimpse the open sea beyond?" Joel asks.
Most of all, Joel wonders about his mother, Jenny, who disappeared when he was a baby, leaving Joel's father moody and Joel to feel "like a mother to myself." Joel's father keeps a single photograph of Jenny but refuses to talk about her, and Joel wonders why his mother abandoned them so long ago. Now, as his father keeps company with their small town's barmaid, Joel grows increasingly concerned that he is about to be abandoned for a second time.
When Joel spots an alluring, mysterious Norwegian elkhound that seems to be searching for something, and when he meets a new boy whose daring ideas both fascinate and repel him, he sets off on secret midnight ramblings through his tiny Swedish village, discovering a side of his town --- and himself --- that he didn't know existed.
One of the things I've most enjoyed about Henning Mankell's Inspector Wallander series is the way the author probes into the psyche and emotions of his protagonist. This same type of emotional depth of character is on display in A BRIDGE TO THE STARS, which is a very effective portrayal of a boy on the cusp of adolescence. Searching for independence on his nightly forays with his charismatic new friend, Joel nevertheless still longs for safety and security, as represented by his desire to remain close to his father and to discover more about his absent mother.
Joel's thoughtful story is enhanced not only by the boy's imaginative fancies and by Mankell's lyrical writing (capably translated into English by Laurie Thompson), but also by the array of memorable and eccentric characters who populate Joel's small town. Hopefully Mankell will expand his portrait of this northern Swedish village --- and further explore Joel's compelling character --- in his other books about Joel Gustafsson, due to be published in English in the near future. New, younger audiences now have reason to discover this Swedish author, whose fame is sure to grow among American audiences.
--- Reviewed by Norah Piehl | | |  | Mankell Writes For Young People Feb 28, 2006 |
Joel is eleven years old and lives in cold Northern Sweden. His mother has left him and his father Samuel, leaving him with a great sense of being abandoned. He wants to care for his dad, a sailor who has abandoned the sea to take a job chopping trees, a job that he hates, but at the same time wants to know from his father why his mum has left them. At school he is ridiculed because he has no mother. To further complicate matters, his father becomes friends with Sara, the waitress at the local bar. No one can take the place of his mother, certainy not this woman who might produce unwanted half-brothers and sisters for him. He fears being even further abandoned when he returns home to find his father's bed empty. Joel gets into serious trouble by listening to his young so-called friend Ture. Mr. Mankell of course weaves all these elements into a fine story for youngsters as Joel learns about death, caring for people who are different from him-- No-Nose, the woman "with a handkerchief instead of a nose in her face and the Old Bricklayer who takes him for a ride in his lorry-- and ultimately that he is much loved by his father Samuel.
Mr. Mankell, a first class writer of detective novels, in this moving story joins the ranks of other fine writers, for example Reynolds Price, Joyce Carol Oates and Joni Morrison in the United States and Ian McEwan in Great Britain, who also have written fine fiction for young people. | | | Write your own review about A Bridge to the Stars
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