Autorenbild.
47+ Werke 693 Mitglieder 8 Rezensionen

Über den Autor

Beinhaltet die Namen: Ann Pilling, Ann Cheetham

Reihen

Werke von Ann Pilling

Black Harvest (1986) 65 Exemplare
Henry's Leg (1985) 47 Exemplare
The Donkey's Day Out (1990) 32 Exemplare
Dustbin Charlie (1990) 29 Exemplare
The Year of the Worm (1984) 23 Exemplare
The Pit (1987) 21 Exemplare
The Witch of Lagg (1985) 21 Exemplare
The Big Pink (1987) 20 Exemplare
The Beggar's Curse (1984) 15 Exemplare
Baked Bean Kids (Sprinters) (1993) 15 Exemplare
The Empty Frame (1998) 12 Exemplare
Amber's Secret (2000) 11 Exemplare
Love Stories (1997) — Herausgeber; Mitwirkender — 10 Exemplare
The Catnappers (2003) 9 Exemplare
Stan (1988) 8 Exemplare
On the Lion's Side (1988) 7 Exemplare
Getting Rid of Aunt Mildred (2005) 5 Exemplare
A Broken Path (1991) 4 Exemplare
Our Kid (Puffin Books) (1991) 4 Exemplare
Considering Helen (1993) 3 Exemplare
Vote for Baz (Puffin Books) (1993) 2 Exemplare
Mother's Daily Scream (1996) 2 Exemplare
The Life of Jesus (1996) 2 Exemplare
Something to Do with Love (1997) 2 Exemplare
Home Field (2008) 2 Exemplare
Growing Pains (2008) 2 Exemplare
Frankie (1991) 1 Exemplar
The Dancing Sailors (2011) 1 Exemplar
Ground Cover (2015) 1 Exemplar
Het verkeerde been (1987) 1 Exemplar
Mi primera Biblia Everest (1993) 1 Exemplar

Zugehörige Werke

Mystery Stories: An Intriguing Collection (1996) — Mitwirkender — 89 Exemplare
The Young Oxford Book of Ghost Stories (1994) — Mitwirkender — 38 Exemplare
The Puffin Book of Ghosts and Ghouls (1992) — Mitwirkender — 12 Exemplare
The Dollmaker and Other Sinister Stories (1982) — Mitwirkender — 7 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Geburtstag
1944-10-17
Geschlecht
female

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

Hmmm, not a great book, haphazard story, shallow characters and a rushed ending. It had its moments but all in all I didn’t enjoy it.
 
Gekennzeichnet
jhullie | Mar 20, 2018 |
Pin collects things and in one bizarre episode empties some baked beans into a goldfish bowl sending the fish dizzy. I didn't get a lot out of this book.
 
Gekennzeichnet
jon1lambert | Aug 21, 2016 |
Twelve-year-old Angela Grace Collis-Browne was happy attending the comprehensive school in Darnley, the industrial mill town in northern England where her father was vicar. But when Rev. Collis-Browne, who was once a doctor, decided to join a medical mission to Pakistan, and his wife accompanied him, Angela found herself deposited, together with her dog Muffet, at The Moat - an exclusive girls' boarding school in Buckinghamshire, where her coldly distant Auntie Pat was the owner and headmistress.

Significantly overweight, in addition to being the Head's niece, Angela was an immediate target for the bullies in her dorm, led by the mean-spirited Sophie Sharman, who nicknamed her "The Big Pink." But Angela, despite her desire to avoid attention, was no doormat, and she soon had her own group of friends and allies - kindly Matron, eccentric English teacher Miss Moss, and two fellow students (Kath Broughton and Hettie Macbride) known as "The Uglies" - and was fighting back. Who would triumph, the AA (the Anti-Angela Society) or the SAS (the Society Against Sophie)? Would Angela ever find the courage to show the school her singing talent? And would Angela ever understand, or warm up to, her Auntie Pat...?

Originally published in 1987, Ann Pilling's The Big Pink is a school story that came along long after the heyday of the genre, one that incorporates many of its common motifs - the new girl who must find her place at school, the rival societies, the seemingly unfriendly mistresses who are really "OK" in the end, the midnight feast - but also subverts some of its expectations. Angela stays overweight, despite her aunt's efforts at imposing a diet, and although she gains in both self-confidence and insight, during her stay at The Moat, she leaves with some of the same insecurities she brought with her.

In some ways, this felt a little dated, with its references to then-current trends and events - Madonna's song Material Girl is playing, in one scene (although Pilling doesn't mention her by name, I simply adored the fact that she mentioned pop stars sounding like they were constipated), the girls watch video cassettes, one character is greatly concerned about the bombings in Northern Ireland - but it also felt current, in the way it presented issues of bullying, body image and belonging. All in all, this was an engaging read, one I would particularly recommend to fans of the girls' school story genre.
… (mehr)
1 abstimmen
Gekennzeichnet
AbigailAdams26 | Apr 2, 2013 |
This is an outstandingly good book. It's one of the few YA ghost stories I've read that can still scare me as an adult — it's genuinely creepy. If you're a writer, you should study the way Pilling gets her effects. I'd say more but if I discuss them they won't work as well. ;-)
 
Gekennzeichnet
particle_p | 1 weitere Rezension | Apr 1, 2013 |

Listen

Auszeichnungen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Jean Baylis Illustrator
Diana Wynne Jones Contributor
Vivien Alcock Contributor
Aafke Brouwer Illustrator
Bonnie Zindel Contributor
Guy de Maupassant Contributor
James Reeves Contributor
Daisy Ashford Contributor
Michael Foreman Illustrator
Oscar Wilde Contributor
Jan Mark Contributor
Adèle Geras Contributor
Kate Walker Contributor
Paul Jennings Contributor
Barbara Robinson Contributor
Betsy Byars Contributor
Jacqueline Wilson Contributor
Paul Zindel Contributor
Cynthia Rylant Contributor
Maeve Binchy Contributor
Ralph Prince Contributor
David Wyatt Illustrator

Statistikseite

Werke
47
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
693
Beliebtheit
#36,521
Bewertung
½ 3.6
Rezensionen
8
ISBNs
141
Sprachen
7

Diagramme & Grafiken