Plus d’un million de livres à portée de main !
Bookbot

Beverley Naidoo

    21 mai 1943

    L'œuvre de Beverley Naidoo est profondément marquée par son éducation dans l'Afrique du Sud de l'apartheid et son exil ultérieur. Son écriture explore souvent des thèmes de justice, de résistance et de l'esprit humain durable face à l'oppression. À travers ses récits puissants, elle met en lumière les complexités de l'injustice sociale et le courage nécessaire pour la défier. La prose de Naidoo donne vie aux expériences de ceux qui luttent pour un monde meilleur.

    The Other Side of Truth
    Out of Bounds
    Cinderella of the Nile
    Making It Home: Real-Life Stories from Children Forced to Flee
    CHAIN OF FIRE
    Web of Lies
    • Web of Lies

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      4,0(4)Évaluer

      Two years after their flight from Nigeria, 14-yr-old Sade, her younger brother Femi and her father are living in a council flat in London, waiting for their claim for asylum to be approved. Sade is upset when Femi is drawn into a violent possibly drug-dealing gang, and even more upset when their father doesn't seem to notice.

      Web of Lies
    • CHAIN OF FIRE

      • 208pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,4(3)Évaluer

      Set in apartheid-era South Africa, the story explores the government's ethnic cleansing policy, which involved forcibly relocating people from their homes to designated 'homelands'.

      CHAIN OF FIRE
    • Through original autobiographical accounts, children from various countries share their poignant experiences of being forced to flee their homes as refugees. This collection offers a powerful glimpse into their lives, highlighting their resilience and hope amid adversity. Accompanied by an 8-page photo insert and maps, it provides a visual context to their stories, making the realities of displacement more relatable and impactful for readers.

      Making It Home: Real-Life Stories from Children Forced to Flee
    • Cinderella of the Nile

      • 32pages
      • 2 heures de lecture
      3,8(110)Évaluer

      Beautifully retold by the award-winning author Beverley Naidoo, this earliest-known version of Cinderella is brought to life for the modern-day reader. Rhodopis is a Greek girl who is sold into slavery by bandits and taken to Egypt. Along the way she becomes friends with the storyteller Aesop and a host of playful animals. Her master gives her a pair of beautiful rose-red slippers, making three other servants jealous. But when Horus, the falcon, sweeps in to steal her slipper, Rhodopis has little idea that this act will lead her to the King of Egypt. The first in our 'One Story, Many Voices' series, this ancient story of Cinderella finds its echo in fairy tales all over the world.

      Cinderella of the Nile
    • Out of Bounds

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,8(207)Évaluer

      Seven stories, spanning the time period from 1948 to 2000, chronicle the experiences of young people from different races and ethnic groups as they try to cope with the restrictions placed on their lives by South Africa's apartheid laws

      Out of Bounds
    • The Other Side of Truth

      • 252pages
      • 9 heures de lecture
      3,7(2302)Évaluer

      After the murder of their mother, twelve-year-old Sade and her younger brother are smuggled out of Nigeria by their journalist father to escape the corrupt military government and growing violence. They are sent to their uncle in London, but when they arrive, he is missing and they are abandoned, passed between foster homes. Their father escapes to England to find them -- but he will be sent back to Nigeria unless Sade can find a way to tell the world what happened to her family.A Silver Medal winner of England's Smarties Book Prize, Beverly Naidoo's new novel explores the issues of family, exile, and freedom wtih eloquence and stunning realism.

      The Other Side of Truth
    • No Turning Back

      • 160pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,6(38)Évaluer

      Escaping from his violent step-father, 12-year-old Sipho heads for Johannesburg, where he has heard that gangs of children live on the streets. Surviving hunger and bitter-cold winter nights is hard--but learning who to trust in the "new" South Africa proves even more difficult.

      No Turning Back
    • Journey to Jo'Burg

      A South African Stop

      • 96pages
      • 4 heures de lecture
      3,7(2056)Évaluer

      If only Mma was here, Naledi wished over and over. . . Mma lives and works in Johannesburg, far from the village thirteen-year-old Naledi and her younger brother, Tiro, call home. When their baby sister suddenly becomes very sick, Naledi and Tiro know, deep down, that only one person can save her. Bravely, alone, they set off on a journey to find Mma and bring her back. It isn't until they reach the city that they come to understand the dangers of their country, and the painful struggle for freedom and dignity that is taking place all around them.

      Journey to Jo'Burg
    • Global Tales

      • 168pages
      • 6 heures de lecture
      3,6(116)Évaluer

      These 16 tales, by both new and internationally known writers, reveal the rich diversity of story writing in English today. They offer a variety of forms, settings, contexts, characters, themes and language in stories that are both accessible and challenging.

      Global Tales
    • Burn My Heart

      • 224pages
      • 8 heures de lecture
      3,6(353)Évaluer

      The Mau Mau - name of a secret society that once struck terror into the hearts of British settlers in Kenya. An episode in history that ended in a State of Emergency, with violent and brutal acts dividing a nation. This book tells the story of how in a country riven by fear and prejudice, even best of friends can betray one another.

      Burn My Heart