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The Tightrope Walkers

de David Almond

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1088251,658 (3.68)3
Young Adult Fiction. Young Adult Literature. HTML:

International award winner David Almond draws on memories of his early years in Tyneside, England, for a moving coming-of-age novel, masterfully told.

A gentle visionary coming of age in the shadow of the shipyards of northern England, Dominic Hall is torn between extremes. On the one hand, he craves the freedom he feels when he steals away with the eccentric girl artist next door, Holly Stroudâ??his first and abiding loveâ??to balance above the earth on a makeshift tightrope. With Holly, Dom dreams of a life different in every way from his shipbuilder dad's, a life fashioned of words and images and story. On the other hand, he finds himself irresistibly drawn to the brutal charms of Vincent McAlinden, a complex bully who awakens something wild and reckless and killing in Dom. In a raw and beautifully crafted bildungsroman, David Almond reveals the rich inner world of a boy teetering on the edge of manhood, a boy so curious and open to impulse that we fear for him and question his balanceâ??and ultimately exult in his trium… (mais)

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This is something different than I normally read, and I had a hard time getting into the book. It definitely wasn't very fast paced, and I couldn't seem to find any common ground with the characters. This doesn't mean that is was necessarily poorly written, just something that didn't really work for me.

Dominic Hall lives in the shipyards in northern England, where he traverses between two different worlds: one with Holly Stroud, where they live in stories, art, and dreams of being tightrope walkers, and one with Vincent McAlinden, full of danger, recklessness, and rebellion. Dominic must learn to balance between the two before he finally becomes a man.

Though I personally couldn't get into this book, there were some beautiful moments; the writing itself was quite lyrical and poetic, actually, like the quote I included above. But there was just one major thing that bothered me throughout the entire novel, the way the dialogue was used. Almond used an English dialect within his text that was hard to read at times, and while I understand the effect that he was going for, I think the book would have worked just as well without it.

The other aspect of the book that threw me off was the pacing of events in the story. It felt incredibly slow moving at the beginning, and it took awhile for me to find the driving conflict of the story. It made the book really hard to get engaged in. But I finished it none-the-less! I always try to finish books, to get the full effect. ( )
  Amanda7 | Oct 12, 2018 |
A book full of nostalgia. Growing up on Tyneside in the sixties. Fiction or autobiography? A bit of both. Enjoyable but a bit like a sixth form English Literature exercise of which the central character would be proud. ( )
  Steve38 | Jul 8, 2018 |
"Bliddy" beautiful bildungsroman set in northern England during the 1950s and '60s. Lyrical, poetic story of a boy growing up in the working class family of a ship welder. There is a girl next-door, his best friend, and a half-crazy, half-wild boy the boy is drawn to. This is marketed as a story for young adults, but I cannot imagine it being read by any teens I know. It is a great read for adults, however. ( )
  fromthecomfychair | Nov 18, 2017 |
Dominic Hall is growing up in a pebbledashed home in northern England in the post-WWII years. His father, a caulker in the shipyards, is a tough but fair and loving man. After the war, England has changed and opportunity exists for Dominic, who is well-behaved, does well in school, and has a fluency as a wordsmith that gets him noticed. Dom and his best friend, Holly, are admitted to a good school that will prepare them to be the first in their families to attend university. After a circus visits, Holly and Dominic put up a tight-rope, and Dom's mother shows them how to balance and walk the wire. Holly paints and Dom writes poetry and both succeed admirably in school. But an animal part of Dom lies untended. The boy feels a pull toward the local delinquent, Vincent McAlinden, with whom he begins to thieve, kill small animals and create mayhem. Dom walks a tight-rope, both literally and metaphorically. In which world does he belong?
Almond's writing is crisp and beautiful. From the slang of the shipyard to recitations in the poetry-bookshop, Almond shows through language the dichotomy that exists in Dom. The Tight-Rope Walker has clever symbolism and handles big ideas, but the plot moves slowly in places. Although I don't agree with Almond's conclusions about what it means to be human, I admire his literary finesse with the question. Dom's struggles to understand who he is and who he could become will ring true to many adolescents. ( )
  elizabethcfelt | May 15, 2017 |
New, only Churchill so far, maybe more later.
  Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Jun 5, 2016 |
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Young Adult Fiction. Young Adult Literature. HTML:

International award winner David Almond draws on memories of his early years in Tyneside, England, for a moving coming-of-age novel, masterfully told.

A gentle visionary coming of age in the shadow of the shipyards of northern England, Dominic Hall is torn between extremes. On the one hand, he craves the freedom he feels when he steals away with the eccentric girl artist next door, Holly Stroudâ??his first and abiding loveâ??to balance above the earth on a makeshift tightrope. With Holly, Dom dreams of a life different in every way from his shipbuilder dad's, a life fashioned of words and images and story. On the other hand, he finds himself irresistibly drawn to the brutal charms of Vincent McAlinden, a complex bully who awakens something wild and reckless and killing in Dom. In a raw and beautifully crafted bildungsroman, David Almond reveals the rich inner world of a boy teetering on the edge of manhood, a boy so curious and open to impulse that we fear for him and question his balanceâ??and ultimately exult in his trium

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