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Maura's Angel (An Avon Camelot Book)
 
 
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Maura's Angel (An Avon Camelot Book) [Hardcover]

Lynne Reid Banks (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

8 and up3 and upAn Avon Camelot Book

It all started with a shattering bang. Maura found herself flat on her face on the pavement. For moments there was nothing, just blackness and silence. But she knew. Once again, a bomb had exploded in the streets of Belfast.

Maura lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her life is hard. Her poor mother, thin and tired, depends on her to care for the baby, get her six-year-old brother off to school, and dress and feed her big sister Colleen, who is as helpless as an infant. Maura's big brother Kieran is in prison for sabotage against the Brits; her father is risking the same, or worse, as a member of the Irish Republican Army. And the war goes on and on. It seems so hopeless.

Then, in the wake of the bomb blast, an amazing thing happens. Maura looks up from the pavement and sees a girl lying next to her who looks just like her--except that she's perfect...Also, she's naked! Maura quickly wraps the girl in her own coat and takes her home.

Who is this strange creature? Where has she come from? She seems to know nothing of the world--not even simple things like how to eat or fall asleep or talk. She doesn't understand pain.

Yet she has a magical way with people. The baby stops crying; quarrels dissolve. Even poor, simple minded Colleen responds to her. Maura's mother smiles again, and their home becomes peaceful and full of exciting moments of magic.

When Maura discovers Angela's secret, she trusts her for the miracle that could bring her father and brother home. But Angela doesn't understand Maura's world-a world that spoils miracles, making them go tragically wrong.

 

It all started with a shattering bang. Maura found herself flat on her face on the pavement. For moments there was nothing, just blackness and silence. But she knew. Once again, a bomb had exploded in the streets of Belfast.

Maura lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her life is hard. Her poor mother, thin and tired, depends on her to care for the baby, get her six-year-old brother off to school, and dress and feed her big sister Colleen, who is as helpless as an infant. Maura's big brother Kieran is in prison for sabotage against the Brits; her father is risking the same, or worse, as a member of the Irish Republican Army. And the war goes on and on. It seems so hopeless.

Then, in the wake of the bomb blast, an amazing thing happens. Maura looks up from the pavement and sees a girl lying next to her who looks just like her--except that she's perfect...Also, she's naked! Maura quickly wraps the girl in her own coat and takes her home.

Who is this strange creature? Where has she come from? She seems to know nothing of the world--not even simple things like how to eat or fall asleep or talk. She doesn't understand pain.

Yet she has a magical way with people. The baby stops crying; quarrels dissolve. Even poor, simple minded Colleen responds to her. Maura's mother smiles again, and their home becomes peaceful and full of exciting moments of magic.

When Maura discovers Angela's secret, she trusts her for the miracle that could bring her father and brother home. But Angela doesn't understand Maura's world-a world that spoils miracles, making them go tragically wrong.

00-01 Keystone to Reading Book Award Masterlist


Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Banks (Angela and Diabola) paints a touching portrait of growing up amid the upheavals in Belfast in this coming-of-age fantasy. Maura has learned early in life about struggle and hardship. Political violence has claimed the life of one brother, another is in jail because of an informer and her father has gone off to fight with the Irish Republican Army. Left to help care for a retarded sister and two younger brothers, Maura has become cynical and resentful. Nevertheless, when a bomb causes havocAand alters her usual route homeAmagic enters Maura's life in the form of an angel (which Banks suggests is her biological twin, Angela, who died at birth). As Maura teaches Angela how to walk, eat and sleep, and how to cope with the harshness around them, the two learn valuable lessons from each other: Angela shows Maura that asking why and trying to change the course of events can be dangerous, while Maura's family circumstances demonstrate to Angela that human life can be painful and imperfect. Banks's attention to the consequences of men going off to war and leaving their families to fend for themselves is powerful, especially in combination with her emphasis on the ways gentleness, kindness and music alleviate some of the pain (e.g., Angela's effect on the retarded sister). The author's skillful balancing of the magical elements and often grim reality that life holds will ring true for many young readers. Ages 8-12.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From School Library Journal

Grade 4-6-Maura, 11, lives in Belfast, Northern Ireland. Her older brother has been jailed by the British and her father, a member of the Irish Republican Army, is on the run. After a bomb goes off after school, Maura is surprised when a girl suddenly appears next to her; not only is she stark naked, but she also looks exactly like Maura, only more perfect and more innocent. The girl, who calls herself Angela, is accepted without question into Maura's family and school life. Although she apparently knows nothing of the world, and has to be taught such basic things as eating and crying, she has a miraculously soothing effect on everyone with whom she comes into contact. As Maura soon discovers, her unworldliness is no accident; Angela is an angel. Having a physical body and being a part of this reality are profoundly disturbing and exhilarating to her; she can finally begin to understand joy and pain. It is her desperate wish to make things right for Maura's family, however, that brings about terrible consequences. Banks's excellent depiction of the very ordinary Maura and her imperfect family makes this unusual story wonderfully down-to-earth. Even Angela is believable, as the sheen of heaven that emanates from her is gradually worn away by the grit of the real world. Her horror at the pain and suffering she sees will touch readers, but they will also understand Maura's impatience and annoyance at Angela's extreme sensitivity. Kids will race through this novel, yet will think about it long after they turn the final page-Eva Mitnick, Los Angeles Public Library
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 8 and up
  • Hardcover: 128 pages
  • Publisher: HarperCollins; 1st edition (May 1, 1998)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0380975904
  • ISBN-13: 978-0380975907
  • Product Dimensions: 8.7 x 5.8 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #5,518,049 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Lynne Reid Banks is a best-selling author for children and adults. Her classic children's novel 'The Indian in the Cupboard' has sold nearly six million copies worldwide. She was born in London in 1929 and worked as an actress, writer and TV news reporter. Lynne has written thirty books: her first, 'The L-Shaped Room', was published in 1960. She now lives in Dorset, where she continues to write. Lynne says that writing for children comes much more easily than writing for adults. Tony Ross was born in London in 1938. He has worked as an art director at an advertising agency, a graphic designer, a cartoonist, a teacher, a film maker and as a Senior Lecturer in Art at Manchester Polytechnic.

 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
5.0 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars angelic visitor, March 19, 2003
This review is from: Maura's Angel (An Avon Camelot Book) (Hardcover)
Maura has a difficult life,growing up in war times and helping to take care of her severely retarded sister(who it turns out has a pure soul).She was also a twin,left twin-less after birth,like Elvis Presley was.Her twin was named Angela.One day Maura meets a girl who looks enough like her to be a twin,except that she is flawless without scars and stuff like that.Her name is Angela.Turns out she is an angel,and she has come to help Maura in all she does,and the longer she stays the more human she becomes.But the day comes that Angela must leave,in a human and a noble way.

Lynne Reid Banks is a unique author.A particularly good line was Angela's, "Our souls are the same" when speaking of males and females.We live in a twisted MArs and Venus,scientific mumbo-jumbo world,so thank you Lynne,for letting Angela say it so simply , Our souls are made the same.
We need more minds like Lynne Reid Banks.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars An unpredictable story, July 10, 1999
Maura's Angel is a wonderful and unpredictable. The angel"Angela" is beautifully portrayed and the author did a fine job in Angela's role as a family member.I highly recomend this story to anyone.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Maura, April 23, 2009
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My 12-13 yr old daughter loved this book, even read it twice - unheard of! She's one we've had to work with on her reading, she prefers comics.

The book does deal with tough issues. Poverty, conflict-war (and a father absent, off to fight it), and the older daughter (Maura) having big responsibilities to her siblings, including a teenage, retarded sister. But it is also heartening and wonderful. As well as having a character that tween girls can sympathize with.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THE REASON MAURA fell asleep during school assembly that Thursday morning was because she was honestly tired. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Sister Josephine, Father Brady
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