Broken
By (Author) Daniel Clay
HarperCollins Publishers
Fourth Estate Ltd
1st August 2013
Film tie-in edition
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Paperback
256
Width 129mm, Height 198mm, Spine 19mm
220g
You thought your neighbours were bad Wait till you meet the Oswalds. They're crass, cruel and seemingly untouchable. Until, that is, they go one step too far and the results begin to tear an entire community apart.
Skunk Cunningham is an eleven-year-old girl in a coma. She has a loving dad, an absent mother and a brother who plays more X-Box than is good for him. She also has the neighbours from hell: the five Oswald girls and their thuggish father Bob, vicious bullies all of them, whose reign of terror extends unchallenged over their otherwise quiet suburban street.
And yet terrifying though they undoubtedly are, the stiletto-wearing, cider-swilling Oswald girls are also sexy so when Saskia asks shy, virginal Rick Buckley for a ride in his new car, he cant believe his luck. Too bad that Saskia cant keep her big mouth shut. When, after a quick fumble, she broadcasts Ricks deficiencies to anyone who will listen, it puts ideas into her younger sisters silly head ideas that will see Rick dragged off to prison, humiliated, and ultimately, in his fathers words, broken by the experience.
From her hospital bed, Skunk tries to make sense of the events that follow, as Saskias small act of cruelty spreads through the neighbourhood in a web of increasing violence. As we inch closer to the mystery behind her coma, Skunks innocence becomes a beacon by which we navigate a world as comic as it is tragic, and as effortlessly engaging as it is ultimately uplifting, in this brilliant and utterly original debut novel.
There are many good things here: its bold, prescient, engaging and oddly touching. Guardian
A seething indignation propels the narrative to its violent conclusion. Arena
This is a novel whose plot and vivid, pared-down imagery bravely patrol the terrifying border at which the human blurs into the bestial and inanimateremarkably controlled and disciplinedClays triumph is in exploring the kindness and love that might heal and restore and what it is to feel fully alive. Anita Sethi, Independent
Its funny and sad and movingand ultimately very engaging. Francesca Segal, Observer
A moving, intriguing and at times funny debut novel. Daily Express
Daniel Clay is thirty-eight years old and married with no children. He lives in Hampshire in the UK. Swap is his second novel.