Chinglish

Chinglish by Sue Cheung

Book of the Week: 29 September 2019

Illustrations by Sue Cheung

The illustrated diary of Jo Kwan whose family move to a cramped flat above their Chinese takeaway in Coventry in 1984. Jo and her younger sister, Bonny, live with their mum who speaks very little English and their father, who is bad-tempered and erratic. Simon, their older brother, lives with grandparents a few streets away. Despite not enjoying school, except for art lessons, Jo finds friendship with fellow outsider, Tina, who is a goth. She is unwilling to introduce Tina to her family in case she discovers how chaotic her home life is – her dad likes to give their pet goats piggybacks around the garden for instance. Most of Jo’s story is packed with quirky characters and some funny and relatable incidents, but there is a dark side to her family life that only comes to the fore in the final third of the book. Despite the funny, down-to-earth style and the Wimpy Kid type drawings, this is an honest and upsetting story that the youngest readers may find a bit disturbing.

It has some themes in commons with The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4 by Sue Townsend, Anita and Me by Meera Syal and The Boy with the Topknot by Sathnam Sanghera.

The Private Blog of Joe Cowley

The Private Blog of Joe Cowley by Ben Davis

Book of the Week: 2nd December 2018

Illustrated by Mike Lowery

This isn’t an unjustly neglected classic, or a new book, so why is it Book of the Week? I have just finished updating a funny books reading list and this is one I hadn’t read. I’m glad to say that it definitely deserves its place on the list. I know many of you will agree as I have recently had to buy new copies to replace the worn-out ones.

Joe neatly sums up the plot on page 1:

“In the past year this catalogue of misery happened:

  • Mum and Dad got divorced.
  • Dad shacked up with Svetlana, who is like a million years younger than him and is Russian.
  • Mum started seeing Jim the plasterer, and yet the crack in my bedroom ceiling grows bigger with each passing day.
  • I nearly got to snog Louise Bentley at the fair, but ended up throwing up all over her after the walzer made me nauseous.
  • I gained the nickname ‘Puke Skywalker’ at school for the above reason.
  • That idiot Gav James ramped up his campaign of torment against me, once even dunking me in a bin upside down and making me stay there for the entire lunch break”.

Joe’s story of avoiding bullies and trying to get a date with the girl of his dreams is endearingly told, peopled with oddball characters and scattered with embarrassing incidents.

The series is aimed at older readers than Diary of a Wimpy Kid due to ‘colourful’ language and the previously mentioned ’embarrassing incidents’.

 

Half My Facebook Friends Are Ferrets

Half My Facebook Friends Are Ferrets
by J.A. Buckle
Book of the Week: 22 February 2015

Half my facebook friends

Josh Walker keeps a list of things he wants to do before he turns 16, including getting something pierced or tattooed and mastering ‘One’ by Metallica on his guitar. He has dreams of becoming a rock star but at the moment he is stuck with a pet ferret, some odd friends, a strict mum, an annoying sister and studying for his GCSEs.

If you enjoyed The Secret Diary of Adrian Mole Aged 13 3/4 by Sue Townsend, Socks Are Not Enough by Mark Lowery or Boys Don’t Knit by T.S. Easton then you should enjoy this. A sequel is planned for April 2015 entitled My Smoky Bacon Crisp Obsession.

There is some strong language but with asterisks.