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Verscheurd

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Het leven van Fliss lijkt op een foto die tot kleine stukjes wordt verscheurd. Dat vindt ze zelf tenminste. Haar ouders doen niets anders dan ruzie met elkaar maken en het is alsof ze vergeten zijn dat Fliss nog bestaat.

Haar relatie met Simon zit wel goed: ze is gek op hem, en hij op haar. Maar voor hoe lang? Fliss' vriendinnen houden vol dat Simon een grote mislukking is, en Simons moeder ziet hun relatie totaal niet zitten.

Keer op keer moet Fliss met alles wat ze in zich heeft, vechten tegen onverwachte tegenslagen en kritiek. Ze trekt zich steeds meer in zichzelf terug en probeert te bedenken wat ze nog kan doen...

191 pages, Hardcover

First published January 1, 2001

1 person is currently reading
52 people want to read

About the author

Kate Cann

45 books239 followers
When I was a child, I wanted to be a witch. My first foray into writing was a series of nasty spells full of rats’ tails and bats’ wings. Then, when I turned thirteen, I began keeping a lurid diary, full of adoration or loathing, depending on who I was writing about. I used my later diaries for the Diving In trilogy.

I never thought ‘I want to be a writer’, but I loved books and writing. At school, I was rubbish at just about everything but English, so I went on to Kent University where I did two degrees in English and American Literature. At Kent, I fell dramatically in love with the man I'm still married to. We had loads of fights and adventures, but we kept coming back together. He's still the person I most want to spend time with. Awww!

My first proper job was in a publishing house, Time Life Books, as a copy-editor. I felt very glamorous. I used to go to the huge YMCA on Tottenham Court Road at lunchtime and do aerobics classes (very big in the 1980s and yes - I wore legwarmers). Then I'd fall asleep over my desk in the afternoon.

When my two kids came along, I set up as a freelance copy-editor and worked from home. By chance I got given some teenage books to edit, and I hated the way they treated sexual relationships: they were either full of gloom and doom, or were gushy, unrealistic candyfloss. So I got bitten by the ‘I can do better than this’ bug, and started writing. I remember the first day I started to write - it took me over. I forgot to eat (unthinkable for me) and I nearly forgot to collect the kids from school. About a year after that, Diving In was accepted for publication.

When I ran out of material from my diaries and memories, I realized my daughter and son were teenagers, and started eavesdropping on them. They were extremely tolerant about this although they did sometimes demand money from me.

Big changes have been afoot recently. My kids have left home - really left home, not just gap-year-travelling/university left home, and my old man is doing the sort of work that means he can work from home a lot of the time. So we've sold up and moved into the wilds of Wiltshire and so far I am absolutely loving it. The space, the silence, seeing the stars at night in the pitch black, the owls, the trees, the walks, the great food in the local pubs - everything! I'd started to bring nature into my books - it all started with Crow Girl - and now I'm working on two books about a city girl who gets plunged into the wilds. So the move is very much linked to and helping my writing. I think the sheer beauty and power of nature and how it can get right inside you is something a lot of kids are cut off from today.

I still love London though - the plan is to come up every couple of weeks, catch up with all my old mates, possibly do something seriously cultured like go to the theatre. And I want to travel a bit more, too - offsetting my increased carbon footprint with an enormous compost heap.

I love long conversations, running, reading, gardening, walking and white wine (in moderation of course) and I’m the first to admit I have the life of Reilly (who apparently had a pretty cushy life). I start the day with a run or walk with my dog, when I think about what’s going to happen next in the book I’m writing. Then I have a huge breakfast, and get down to work. I write on (or if it’s cold, in) the spare bed with a laptop, my dog at the bottom of the bed. If it’s sunny, I write in the garden, on a sun-lounger. Tough, ay? I also have this theory that you can’t be truly creative for more than about three or four hours a day, so in the mid afternoon, I knock off, and do my emails and stuff. Told you it was cushy.

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Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews
Profile Image for Micki Lou Price.
118 reviews3 followers
November 12, 2022
Having read this as a teen, it will be interesting to see how my opinion differs on the points in this book. Very much a Teen book, didn't enjoy it seco d time around.
Profile Image for Tara.
277 reviews23 followers
January 30, 2012
Not Kate Canns best book that's for sure, Breaking up follows Fliss's life as her parents split up and life turns to hell. She is leaning heavily on her boyfriend Simon who has had enough.
Fliss's character is not one that yoyu will like or relate to very well. She is a callous, selfish bitch and even at the end when Kate's trying to make you feel sorry for her, you still can't stand her.
Profile Image for Sera.
756 reviews
July 22, 2013
Read this about ten years ago. Nice light read, but I've outgrown it
Displaying 1 - 4 of 4 reviews

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