Frankie & Stankie

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16 17 18 year old
1950s fifties setting history
20th twentieth century
40th fortieth anniversary special edition
A01=Barbara Trapido
Author_Barbara Trapido
Beautiful country memories
book for female friend teenagers
Brother of the More Famous Jack
Category=WZ
comfort reading
comforting classics about growing up
coming of age novels
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Equally hilarious and heartbreaking
Finding yourself
Juggling
Liberal dissenting family
Mother's Day gift
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Noah's Ark
Political consciousness
Racial divide inequality
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Sex Stravinsky
South Africa apartheid racism
Temples Delight
traditional bildungsroman
When was young younger
Whitbread award shortlist shortlisted
young women girls

Product details

  • ISBN 9780747599593
  • Weight: 257g
  • Dimensions: 129 x 198mm
  • Publication Date: 18 May 2009
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Barbara Trapido's captivating novel of coming-of-age novel about sisters, friendship and political awakening in 1950s South Africa ______________________ ‘This is a gorgeous book about growing up … it also manages to convey, with admirable lightness of touch, the dawning of a political consciousness … A wonderful read' - Observer 'A beautifully written slice of both personal and political history … by the end of the novel, you are immersed in her world and simply never want to leave it' - Guardian 'A blissfully funny sequence of portraits, family upon family, vignette upon vignette' - Daily Telegraph ______________________ Dinah and her sister Lisa are growing up in 1950s South Africa, where racial laws are tightening. They are two little girls from a dissenting liberal family. Big sister Lisa is strong and sensible, while Dinah is weedy and arty. At school, the sadistic Mrs Vaughan-Jones is providing instruction in mental arithmetic and racial prejudice. And then there's the puzzle of lunch break. 'Would you rather have a native girl or a koelie to make your sandwiches?' a first-year classmate asks. But Dinah doesn't know the answer, because it's her dad who makes her sandwiches. As the apparatus of repression rolls on, Dinah finds her own way. As we follow her journey through childhood and adolescence, we enter into one of the darker passages of twentieth-century history.
Barbara Trapido was born in South Africa and is the author of six novels. She lives in Oxford.

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