This is a brave, brutal story told with a shocking immediacy. Alex Wheatle has created a disturbing portrait of life in a children s home, in language which is plain, unsparing, and heart-rendingly poignant Daily Mail 'With a friendship of unspoken confidences remaining the focus, the four boys negotiate a mutual search for understanding and freedom. The narrative is strong and meaningful.' Independent on Sunday 'This is a book to read and nourish... For it is a book which never gives up on its characters and, doing such, also never gives up on its readers.' Morning Star 'This book is impossible to put down. A tale of camaraderie, survival and revenge, Home Boys is in parts a British equivalent of Stephen King s classic Stand By Me, albeit with a more immediate and harrowing background.' Buzz Magazine 'A gripping, horrifying and moving adventure story.' Maggie Gee 'I think I went through every emotion possible whilst reading this book and was bereft when I got to the end.' 5/4 nudge-book.com Four friends decide to run away from the horror of their everyday lives in a children's home in the English countryside. They head for the woods, their sense of freedom surprises them, and for the first time they feel the exhilaration of adolescence. Yet the forest slowly asserts its own power and what happens there will affect the four boys' lives forever. With his trademark humour, compelling narrative directness, and rhythmic prose, Alex Wheatle here shows himself to be an author of real calibre, exposing the social stigma associated with children's homes, and the psychological consequences of their impact on sensitive children. Never losing pace or failing to engage the reader at every moment, Home Boys is an unflinchingly honest depiction of childhood.
This was an amazing tale of young boys who are all living in the care home system and nothing seems to faze them although there is an undercurrent of disturbing happenings in the background. These boys however are typical of the era and loved playing out and making their own adventures albeit sometimes being a little bit naughty. They decide that the Childrens Home isn't for them and make a break for freedom which when it comes is a lot scarier than they thought. I loved the bit where they stole golfers balls and couldn't stop giggling when watching them look for them but it wasn't all laughs and the way Alex Wheatle has written this book with all the funny and endearing things about the children there was a sad and brutal undercurrent. I think I went through every emotion possible whilst reading this book and was bereft when I got to the end. Thank you to Nudge for my copy of the book.
Story of deep friendship cultivated in the children homes of the 70s where abuse and stereotyping ripped lives apart. A redemption story of survival and the impact of suffering. Also funny and brilliant.
Likeable characters who are easy to root for, with heartbreaking themes. But, I was expecting more of a “lord of the flies” type novel, and felt this lacked the adventurous and gripping middle chapters that it needed
I couldn't put this book down. It engaged so many feelings: shock, anger, sadness, dark humor ... a strong and poignant story of comradeship, loyalty, friendship and the struggle to navigate through painful shared childhood experience.