Mean Tide Mean Tide

Mean Tide

    • 5.0 • 1 Rating
    • £1.99
    • £1.99

Publisher Description

Kids can survive anything, they say. Oliver, aged twelve, has a missing father in Africa, his mother has had a breakdown, and he is recovering from chemo. He is sent to live with his only relative. On a foggy day, one bald boy, with his cat, Flop, arrives at his Grandma's house at the water's edge in Greenwich. Oliver discovers to his horror that his Grandma, a famous psychic, hates cats. Her housekeeper, Lena loathes kids, and silent Justine seems to hate everyone. Add crazy Harriet, who has seen every fortune teller in London; Aura, a mysterious, aspiring beautiful actress and Bullet, the homeless kid with a very mean streak, trouble can't be far behind. When Oliver and Justine find a beautiful dog with it's throat cut washed up on the riverbank, Oliver feels a strange connection to this dead animal and so begins his own induction into a psychic world. –––

'An engaging, unusual and completely engrossing read' - Beverly Birch - author of 'Rift'

GENRE
Fiction & Literature
RELEASED
2011
7 September
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
399
Pages
PUBLISHER
Lulu.com
SIZE
861.9
KB

Customer Reviews

Hackwriters magazine ,

Wonderful Tale of Boy's Awakening

The hero of Sam North's young adult novel MEAN TIDE is Oliver, a survivor of much at his tender age of twelve years, and a likable lad coming to terms with a quite odd and mysterious adult world about him. From the opening pages of MEAN TIDE, the reader is transported into Oliver's world with compelling and salient sensory detail.

Order here
One of North's storytelling talents is he gets the basics of Oliver's world right. For example, what is Oliver's strongest yearning? Is it that he'd be reunited with his father who's gone missing in Africa? Or that his mother, institutionally lost in the world of the insane, will return? No, it's about his hair, or lack thereof. He survived a brain tumor, endured chemotherapy, and now wants nothing more than to stop being bald as an egg. He simply yearns for the return of the first fuzz. He doesn't want to wear hats the rest of his life. Seemingly a vain yearning, true, but just talk to any juvenile who's had a bout with cancer and see what they really want out of life.

Having survived cancer and bereft of both parents, Oliver makes his way to the southeast reaches of Greater London in Greenwich by the River Thames with his beloved cat Flop. Together, the two take up residence with a cast of offbeat characters, headed by Oliver's Grandma Otis.

Mysterious goings-on abound: seances with the dead, criminal activity, a dead body or two washed up on the river tide. Through all the adventures, Oliver soldiers on with curiosity, finding perhaps a "chosen" family for the one he earlier lost.

One of author North's narrative skills as we follow Oliver's youthful exploits is a seamless switching of point of view. Without a bobble, we go from Oliver's mind into that of Grandma Otis and back to Oliver's (or even into cat Flop's!). The POV switches makes these unusual characters all the more credible.

As a young adult novel, MEAN TIDE has several strengths. Oliver is thrown in a new world, pluckily managing to make it his, while at the same time partaking some of its rewards, comfort, and mystery (as discovering his psychic talents). The blossoming of a simpatico friendship with the older but fragile Aura teaches him about coping with illness in life. A love interest in mysterious Justine. The continuing companionship of his indefatigable cat Flop.

At novel's end, Oliver faces an upbeat future--even without hoped-for fuzz on his bald pate. He's earned confidence from sorting out a lot among his new "family" and keen appreciation for the adventure becoming a young adult can be. The reader closes Oliver's story, knowing the hero has made up for a lot of personal loss in its first pages and sees Oliver as stronger for his unstinting effort. Though a young adult novel, MEAN TIDE is recommended for narrative sophistication that will appeal to readers of all ages.
*Available as Print or Download


© Charlie Dickinson
Charlie lives in 'Twilight' country and is currently writing a novel

More Books Like This

Midnight Gods Midnight Gods
2018
The Bone Artists The Bone Artists
2015
Sweet Little Chittering Sweet Little Chittering
2022
The Goat Parade The Goat Parade
2018
Mystery Tribune / Issue Nº8 Mystery Tribune / Issue Nº8
2019
Imaginary Friends Imaginary Friends
2008

More Books by Sam North

The Curse of the Nibelung The Curse of the Nibelung
2011
Diamonds Diamonds
2011