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Format

Paperback
352 pages

Author

Tim Bowler
More books by Tim Bowler

Author's Website

www.timbowler.co.uk/

Publisher

Oxford University Press

Publication date

4th June 2009

ISBN

9780192728715

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Bloodchild by Tim Bowler

Bloodchild

Tim Bowler


Primary Age range - 14+ readers   Category - Books of the Month   Secondary Age range - 11+ readers   

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Julia Eccleshare's comment:

If you’re on the hunt for a book that will really grab you, put shivers down your spine and ensure that at the end of every chapter you gasp for breath, then Bowler’s Bloodchild is the novel for you. Incredibly atmospheric of time and place with characters that draw you in, Bowler is the true master of the teenage psychological thriller and a wonderfully individual voice to boot.



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Synopsis

Bloodchild by Tim Bowler

Will lies in a deserted lane. All he knows is that he's had an accident and that his life is slipping away. Against all the odds he survives - but with an almost total loss of memory.

He does not even know himself. And that is not all. At night he is tormented by visions, in the daytime by hostile strangers.

Why does he have so many enemies? And who is the strange child who seems to have a story to tell him? Something has happened in this town, something terrifying. Will can sense it but he can't work out what it was. Perhaps the old Will knew.

But that was before the accident. The new Will must search for the answers again - and this is a dangerous task. For the town has a secret and there are those who will do everything in their power to preserve it.

Even kill.



About The Author


Tim Bowler

Tim Bowler is the author of several prize-winning books for children, teenagers and young adults. He has won fourteen awards, including the Carnegie Medal, the pre-eminent UK award for Children's Literature. His novels have been described as psychological, mystical and philosophical adventure thrillers. He was born in Leigh-on-Sea, and studied Swedish and Scandinavian studies at the University of East Anglia in Norwich, undertaking a variety of jobs before becoming a full-time writer in 1994.

His first published novel was Midget (1994), a psychological thriller set in Leigh-on-Sea. This has been followed by several other novels:Dragon's Rock (1995), a thriller set in Devon; River Boy (1997), a story about love and bereavement and winner of the Carnegie Medal; Shadows(1999), a gritty love story; Storm Catchers (2001), a kidnap thriller; Starseeker (2002), a mystical exploration of love, loss and music, also made into a play; Apocalypse (2004), an allegory about the future of mankind, and Frozen Fire (2006), a philosophical thriller about the nature of reality.
His most recent works are Books 1 and 2 of his urban thriller series Blade (published in March 08), and his new novel Bloodchild, a story
about memory, secrets and betrayal (published September 2008).
Tim has been described by the Sunday Telegraph as 'the master of the psychological thriller' and by the Independent as 'one of the truly individual voices in British teenage fiction'.

 

Q & A with Tim Bowler

1.  What inspired you to write your current book?

My current book is called Fighting Back. It's Book 5 in the 8-book BLADE series, a tough urban thriller series which grew out of my fear of knives and my concern about young people using them.

2.  Describe the basic story in two or three sentences?

The BLADE series is about a 14-year-old boy (nicknamed Blade) who has lived by the knife and is now alone in hiding, moving from place to place and living by his wits. But he's in big trouble. Not only are his enemies closing in on him but he's having to deal with his awakening guilt about the past and unexpected feelings of responsibility towards people he's started to care about.

3.  How long do the BLADE books take you to write?

The books are short and pacy and the first four in the series (Playing Dead, Closing In, Breaking Free and Running Scared) each took about three months to write. The final book in the series will be published at the end of 2010.

4.  What do you think people will say about the BLADE series?

I hope they'll find it gripping and believable and I hope they'll care about the complex boy at the heart of the story. But no author has control of readers' reactions – and quite right too!

5.  Are you working on something else at the moment?

I'm also writing a novel which is due for publication in February 2011, just after the BLADE series finishes.

6.  What is your favourite food?

Vegetarian shepherd's pie the way my wife cooks it, followed by coffee ice cream.

7.  What makes you laugh out loud?

I can never predict what will set me off. I laugh at all kinds of things. The only humour I dislike is humour that is cruel.

8.  What is your one luxury item you would take with you on to a Desert Island?

A basketball.

9.  What is your most treasured memory?

The day I got married.

10.  What is your weakness?

A tendency to be over-driven when it comes to writing, an inability to let it go when I ought to have a rest.

11.  Who is the person you most admire?

I admire many, many people and wouldn't want to single out just one.

12.  What is your most embarrassing moment?

The time I opened a bottle of fizzy water before starting a talk and found myself spraying the front row because someone had shaken the bottle earlier. 

13.  What is the best piece of advice you have ever received?

A saying attributed to Goethe: "Whatever you can do, or dream you can do, do it. Boldness has genius, power and magic in it. Start now."

14.  Define beauty.

Something that can't be defined, only recognised (like love).

15.  What are you reading at the moment?

A book called Stepping Stones about the poet Seamus Heaney. I'm also re-reading the Diary of Samuel Pepys and a two-volume collection of the letters of the composer Delius.

16.  What would be on the soundtrack of your film – and who would play you?

Obviously the soundtrack would have to be something manly and heroic and the actor someone extremely charismatic and good-looking. Apart from those criteria, I'm not fussy at all.


17.  Favourite holiday destination?

Nowhere in particular but I prefer quiet, remote places as untouched as possible by tourism.

18.  Which authors have most inspired you?

Shakespeare most of all, and various poets, especially Keats and Blake, and certain more recent poets like Heaney and (from the last century) the Swedish poet Gunnar Ekelöf, whose work I've loved since I first met it at university.

19.  What is your favourite children’s book?

Swallows and Amazons by Arthur Ransome.

20.  Most treasured possession?

My life.

21.  Where are you happiest?

There's no single place or experience. Sometimes I'm happiest when I'm with the people I love most; sometimes I'm happiest when I'm alone thinking and working. Happiness doesn't follow rules. It just falls when it falls.

22.  Favourite biscuit?

They don't make them any more but you used to be able to buy biscuits called "Dad's Cookies" and they were absolutely scrummy.

23.  Pet hates?

People who are pompous.

24.  If you could change one thing about the world we live in today what would it be?

I'd make human beings incapable of violence.


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