Amazon.co.uk Review
Continuing his tradition of strange and wild novels for young adults, David Almond, in
The Fire Eaters, introduces a bizarre character making a sparse living as a self-mutilating, fire-swallowing street performer. McNulty's existence shakes young protagonist Bobby Burns to the core as he contemplates the end of the world (the year is 1962 and the US and Soviet Union seem to be heading toward nuclear war), power, pain, class and death, as well as friendship. The menace and sweetness in Bobby's life parallels the worlds, big and small, he inhabits. A loving family, seaside home and good friends form the foundation. But a crack in that wall is spreading: Bobby's father is ill, class differences are separating him from his best friend, and a ruthless schoolmaster is forcing Bobby to understand that everything has a price. McNulty's growled refrain--"Pay! You'll not see nowt till you pay!"--reiterates the lesson for the often bewildered, but ever stronger boy. Readers familiar with Almond's other haunting books, including the award-winning
Skellig, will welcome this rich, challenging novel. As always, Almond refuses to shy away from the big topics, resulting in a novel dappled with light and dark, filled with wonder and mystery.
--Emilie Coulter, Amazon.com
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
Review
'- the best book he has written since Skellig. Almond offers us this strange and haunting story himself - unabridged again - and although he lacks an actor's virtuosity, he reads finely and his northern accent lends an integrity to a partly autobiographical narrative that keeps the listener faith ful.
Almond understands children and writes with unerring sensitivity about them ... Almond shows, too, that even a child may understand what it means to feel elegiac.' (The Observer 20030719)
David Almond is a fine writer, one of the very finest we have. He is simply incapable of writing a bad sentence. In THE FIRE-EATERS, his sense of place is unerring. ... It is for me David Almond's best book - yes, more compelling than SKELLIG. For this is a complete book, masterful in every aspect. Almond has never been so self-assured... There is the intensity of family life, wonderfully observed and delicately drawn... fear pervades this book, fears we all know, but there is hope too. And we need that. How we need that. (Michael Morpurgo, Financial Times Magazine 20030719)
David Almond's The Fire-Eaters is an exceptional novel. Precisely written, it hauntingly evokes the life of a small community at the time of the Cuban Missile Crisis. (Lesley Agnew, The Bookseller 20030719)
'Once in a while a book comes along that takes over your head and your heart. David Almond's The Fire-Eaters is such a book ... The writing is lyrical and atmospheric and establishes a strong sense of place. The novel engages many emotions and lets you, for a while, live with, and know, this sensitively drawn community.' (Wendy Cooling, The Bookseller 20030719)
'Almond makes familiar issues fresh; his characters are finely drawn and his depiction of place perfectly realised.' (Julia Eccleshare, The Guardian )
'Written in Almond's very particular style that is both spare and poetic, his powerful evocation of time and place where personal relationships reflect wider issues, will not appeal to thrill-a-minute readers but will engross the more mature 12-year-old plus.' (Dinah Hall, The Daily Telegraph )
'a tale so marvellously told that it seems a shame to to label it as only for children... Almond is exceptional in his ability to make happiness real, at the same time as suggesting its fragility.' (Justine Picardie, The Telegraph - Arts section )
SKELLIG: 'Gripping, beautifully and brilliantly written. Everyone is raving about this unforgettable book.' (The Sunday Times )
KIT'S WILDERNESS: '...this superb piece of lyrically-written literary fiction captivates children and their parents alike.' (The Guardian )
HEAVEN EYES: 'David Almond understands the joy and fear of being alive better than most - Heaven Eyes is a mysterious gift of a novel.' (The Times )
SECRET HEART: 'This gripping book will enrich your soul and fire your imagination.' (The Daily Telegraph )
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.