Blood Donors

Blood Donors

by Steve Tasane
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date: 19/09/2013

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BAD BLOOD. BAD DRUGS. BAD BUGS. WELCOME TO THE FINGER.

A Splatterfest with a Social Conscience from radical new voice in teen fiction, Steve Tasane.


Meet Marshall O’Connor the First, troubled youf. He lives in The Finger, the scuzzie old tower block where they put the antisociable families. Nobody ain’t listening, but he’s got a story to tell.

So, people keep dying in The Finger. Authorities say it’s dirty smack going round, but the bodies aren’t all users, and they looked like they died screaming...

Then there’s the bedbugs, all over the block; infestation – proper nasty, yeah? – they’re driving Marshall crazy. True, he’s got himself some anger-management issues, but sometimes you gotta fight for your turf. Cos it’s not the drugs they should be worrying about: the bloodsucking bugs have grown some, and they’re looking for a bigger feed…

BELIEVE – THIS STORY 10 OUTTA 10 ON THE SCARE-OMETER.

ISBN:
9781406350067
9781406350067
Category:
General fiction (Children's / Teenage)
Format:
Epub (Kobo), Epub (Adobe)
Publication Date:
19-09-2013
Language:
English
Publisher:
Walker Books
Steve Tasane

I am the son of a refugee, but that is not the reason why I wrote Child I.

When I was a child I was a recipient of free school dinners, and charity bags full of toys and suchlike at Christmastime. We were a charity case and I had a foreign-sounding name - Tasane - and difficulty speaking English well. But in some ways, the worst thing of all, was that my father then deserted me and my three brothers, and my mother. We were a broken home. I hated being a 'broken' child.

I grew up intensely envious of my friends who had a father. I grew up feeling the same otherness that my father must have felt as a refugee arriving in the UK.

Child I is not my story. But it draws together the links between my own shattered upbringing and that of young refugee children growing up in today's crisis-defined world. Nothing has really changed. We just want to belong. We just want to not be hungry. We just want to be able to laugh and play. We want to be.

And that is why I wrote Child I.

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