An eye for an eye. Its very simple. You choose your homeland like a hyena picking and choosing where he steals his next meal from. Scavenger. Yes you grovel to the feet of Mengistu and when his people spit at you and kick you from the bowl you scuttle across the border. Scavenger. As a violent civil war rages back home, teenager Alem and his father are in a B&B in Berkshire. It's his best holiday ever. The next morning his father is gone and has left a note explaining that he and his mother want to protect Alem from the war. This strange grey country of England is now his home. On his own, and in the hands of the social services and the Refugee Council, he lives from letter to letter, waiting to hear something from his father. Then Alem meets car-obsessed Mustapha, the lovely 'out of your league' Ruth and dangerous Sweeney three unexpected allies who spur him on as Alem fights to be seen as more than just the Refugee Boy. Based on the novel by Benjamin Zephaniah, Refugee Boy is an urgent story of a courageous African boy sent to England to escape the violent civil war, a story about arriving, belonging and finding home.
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Product Details
Weight: 86g
Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
Publication Date: 09 Mar 2013
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Publication City/Country: United Kingdom
Language: English
ISBN13: 9781472506450
About Benjamin Zephaniah
Lemn Sissay OBE is a musician a stand-up comedian radio and television producer a playwright and a poet. He is the author of five poetry collections (Canongate) and one childrens book published by Bloomsbury. Of Ethiopian descent he was brought up by white parents in the north west of England. His previous plays include Don't Look Down (1993) Chaos by Design (1994) Storm (2002) and Something Dark (2006). Benjamin Zephaniah is a high-profile international author well known for his performance poetry with a political edge for adults and ground-breaking performance poetry for children as well as his novels for young people including Face Refugee Boy Gangsta Rap and Teacher's Dead. He was included in The Times' list of Britain's top 50 post-war writers in 2008.
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