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Lädt ... Paradise Lodgevon Nina Stibbe
Books Read in 2016 (3,055) Lädt ...
Melde dich bei LibraryThing an um herauszufinden, ob du dieses Buch mögen würdest. Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. Good light read. Funny, but without a lot of depth. ( ) Lizzie is 15 years old, bored at school and living in a dysfunctional family with no money to buy anything other than 'econo coffee'. This being the 1970s in the East Midlands, Lizzie decides to get a part-time job to buy shampoo and nice clothes from Chelsea Girl and that's how she ends up working at Paradise Lodge. The Lodge is a care home run on a shoestring and peopled by eccentrics, both staff and patients. Whilst at Paradise Lodge Lizzie falls in love, is removed from the 'O level stream', blackmailed by her Deputy Headteacher and grows up a little. Nina Stibbe is a writer who has a very authentic voice which works incredibly well in this genre. She has a knack of picking out the cultural references that pepper her books, here referring to events (the deaths of Elvis and Marc Bolan), fashion (punk, hair dye and shampoo) and media (Starchy and Hutch) that resonate with her readers. No-one could describe this as being a deep and meaningful book, it is a series of amusing vignettes, but it it written with huge gusto and is laugh out loud funny at times. Funny, weird, touching, and rude—sometimes all within the same sentence—Nina Stibbe’s Paradise Lodge is both a coming-of-age story and a tale about getting old. A sequel to Stibbe’s delightful Man at the Helm that can also be read as a standalone novel, Paradise Lodge focuses on a fifteen-year-old British teenager working as an auxiliary-nurse in a chaotic nursing home whose staff and residents are equally eccentric. At Paradise Lodge, laundry is left unwashed, dentures get mixed up, and the kitchen is always perilously close to running out of food, but both residents and staff feel they belong. As Lizzie explains, home is a place where “you’re able to rush in and go to the toilet and flop on the sofa and cry at the horror of the world, or laugh at the silliness of it, and not dread being there.” Stibbe’s Paradise Lodge manages to capture the attraction and the poignancy of just such a place. keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
Gehört zur ReiheLizzie Vogel (2) Auszeichnungen
Fifteen-year-old Lizzie Vogel takes a job as an "auxiliary nurse" at Paradise Lodge, a home for the elderly, and learns that her job entails helping the patients (frequently) to the bathroom. What begins as a way to avoid school and earn some spending money (for the finer things in life, like real coffee and beer shampoo) quickly becomes the education of a lifetime as Lizzy wades through the day-to-day humdrum and drama of this ramshackle refuge for the elderly. And when a rival nursing home threatens, Lizzie discovers that the staff and residents of Paradise Lodge have become her surrogate family, and the only place she's ever felt she belongs-- Keine Bibliotheksbeschreibungen gefunden. |
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Google Books — Lädt ... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)823.92Literature English English fiction Modern Period 2000-Klassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:
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