Dark Waters

Dark Waters

by Catherine MacPhail (Author)

Synopsis

Col McCann is used to being in trouble. It is always the McCann family the police turn to when there is trouble - mainly because of his elder brother Mungo of course, who is generally at the centre of it. But Col adores Mungo, who always seems to be in control. He is the big man of the family since their father was killed. But one day Col discovers what it is like to be seen in a completely different light. Having bunked off school one cold winter's day, he goes to his favourite place, the loch. There he sees a younger boy teetering dangerously on the ice, testing it. When he falls in, Col realises there is noone else to save this boy apart from him. So he dives into the icy water, half drowns himself but saves the boy. He wakes up in hospital to local acclaim. He is a hero! Nothing like this has happened before to a McCann! Col can't resist going back to the loch, and there meets Klaus. Klaus, a refugee, with it appears a genuine fear of Mungo, leads Col to a devastating truth about his brother. Col's loyalty to his family and his need to do what is right are put head to head in direct conflict. A testing and powerful novel from an acclaimed and prize-winning author.

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 176
Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Published: 02 Sep 2002

ISBN 10: 0747555494
ISBN 13: 9780747555490
Children’s book age: 7-9 Years
Book Overview: gripping new novel from the best-selling and prize-winnning Catherine Macphail age-range: 10+, published in the acclaimed strong Catherine MacPhail author look refugees and family loyalties two incredibly strong and topical themes

Author Bio
Catherine MacPhail won the Kathleen Fidler Award with her first novel, Run Zan Run, which Bloomsbury has re-issued, and the Scottish Arts Council Award with her second novel 'Fighting Back'. Her first novel for Bloomsbury, Missing, has sold 25,000 copies, been short-listed for the Angus Book Award,the Lancashire Book Award, and the South Lanarkshire Book Award, and also selected for the World Book Day promotion. Her latest novel, 'Bad Company' has proved immensely popular, selling over 10,000 copies within three months of publication. Catherine MacPhail's work is enormously popular with young teenagers, her trademarks being a mix of humour, with pacy and topical story-lines. Catherine lives in Greenock, Scotland.