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http://worldcat.org/entity/work/id/14243988

The hiding place

This exceptional novel about family, love, and the innocence and terror of childhood was one of the most applauded and auspicious debuts of the last year. Compared by reviewers to Angela's Ashes and Wuthering Heights, The Hiding Place was the only debut work to be shortlisted for England's prestigious Booker Prize -- in the company of Kazuo Ishiguro and Margaret Atwood -- and went on to become a universally praised U.S. national best-seller. Set in a Maltese immigrant community in Cardiff, Wales, and peopled with sharp-edged, luminously drawn characters, The Hiding Place is the story of Frankie Gauci, his wife, Mary, and their six daughters. With her "unusual gift for letting her characters' interior lives come forth" (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution), Azzopardi chronicles Frankie's unforgivable betrayal: gambling away his family's livelihood and eventually the family itself. The Gaucis' story is seen through the eyes of Dolores, the youngest daughter and the embodiment of bad luck in her father's estimation, condemned to bear the mark of a family that is rapidly singeing at the edges. Dolores presents an unsparing portrayal of the fear and hopelessness of childhood amid grim poverty and neglect, of children growing up without safety nets and on sunken foundations. Sustained by a tightrope tension and a stark, youthful wisdom, The Hiding Place conjures the coarse sensuality of life among the docks, the smoky cafes and bars, the crumbling homes and gambling rooms of Tiger Bay. "Astonishing and iridescent" (The Times, London), The Hiding Place is a mesmerizing exploration of how family, like fire, can shift suddenly from something that provides light and warmth to a dangerous conflagration, sparing no one in its path. "A harrowing and remarkably self-assured first novel [that] possesses all the immediacy and emotional power of a memoir ..."--Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times.

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http://schema.org/about

http://schema.org/description

  • "While living in Cardiff, Wales in the 1960s with his wife and six daughters, Frankie Gauci gambles away his family's livelihood and eventually the family itself."
  • "This exceptional novel about family, love, and the innocence and terror of childhood was one of the most applauded and auspicious debuts of the last year. Compared by reviewers to Angela's Ashes and Wuthering Heights, The Hiding Place was the only debut work to be shortlisted for England's prestigious Booker Prize -- in the company of Kazuo Ishiguro and Margaret Atwood -- and went on to become a universally praised U.S. national best-seller. Set in a Maltese immigrant community in Cardiff, Wales, and peopled with sharp-edged, luminously drawn characters, The Hiding Place is the story of Frankie Gauci, his wife, Mary, and their six daughters. With her "unusual gift for letting her characters' interior lives come forth" (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution), Azzopardi chronicles Frankie's unforgivable betrayal: gambling away his family's livelihood and eventually the family itself. The Gaucis' story is seen through the eyes of Dolores, the youngest daughter and the embodiment of bad luck in her father's estimation, condemned to bear the mark of a family that is rapidly singeing at the edges. Dolores presents an unsparing portrayal of the fear and hopelessness of childhood amid grim poverty and neglect, of children growing up without safety nets and on sunken foundations. Sustained by a tightrope tension and a stark, youthful wisdom, The Hiding Place conjures the coarse sensuality of life among the docks, the smoky cafes and bars, the crumbling homes and gambling rooms of Tiger Bay. "Astonishing and iridescent" (The Times, London), The Hiding Place is a mesmerizing exploration of how family, like fire, can shift suddenly from something that provides light and warmth to a dangerous conflagration, sparing no one in its path. "A harrowing and remarkably self-assured first novel [that] possesses all the immediacy and emotional power of a memoir ..."--Michiko Kakutani, The New York Times."@en
  • "Als een vrouw na de dood van haar moeder terugkomt in Cardiff, komen herinneringen aan haar dramatische eerste levensjaren als zesde dochter van een migrantengezin boven."
  • "Dolores Gauci, the youngest daughter in a family of six, watches as her father gambles away the family's money and eventually their lives."@en
  • "Seen through the eyes of Dolores, the youngest of six daughters, this is the story of Frankie Gauci in a Maltese immigrant community in Cardiff, Wales, who gambles away his family's livelihood and eventually the family itself."
  • "Seen through the eyes of Dolores, the youngest of six daughters, this is the story of Frankie Gauci in a Maltese immigrant community in Cardiff, Wales, who gambles away his family's livelihood and eventually the family itself."@en

http://schema.org/genre

  • "Uncorrected proofs (Printing)"@en
  • "Genres littéraires"
  • "Domestic fiction"@en
  • "Domestic fiction"
  • "Belletristische Darstellung"@en
  • "Belletristische Darstellung"
  • "Advance copies (Publishing)"@en
  • "Fiction"@en
  • "Fiction"
  • "Large type books"
  • "Powieść angielska"@pl
  • "Review copies (Publishing)"@en

http://schema.org/name

  • "De schuilplaats"
  • "The hiding place"@en
  • "The hiding place"
  • "The hiding place : a novel"@en
  • "Das Versteck : Roman"
  • "La camera segreta"@it
  • "La camera segreta"
  • "El Escondite"
  • "The Hiding Place"
  • "Das Versteck Roman"
  • "El escondite"
  • "El escondite"@es
  • "Kryjówka"@pl
  • "Kryjówka"
  • "Piilopaikka"@fi
  • "Piilopaikka"
  • "La cachette"

http://schema.org/workExample