The Unpredictability of Being Human

Linni Ingemundsen

Age: 12+

£7.99

The Unpredictability of Being Human

Age 12+

£7.99
Currently Unavailable

This title is currently unavailable, but you may be able to buy it from an Independent Usborne Partner.

More info

Your email address will be deleted after use.

If I got to be God for one day, I'd like to say I'd end world hunger and create world peace. But I wouldn't. Because if God could fix the big stuff, he'd have done it already.

Malin knows she can't fix the big stuff in her life. Instead she watches from the sidelines, as her dad yells, her brother lies and her mum falls apart. At least after she meets Hanna she has a friend to help her. Because being Malin is complicated - learning how to kiss, what to wear to prom, and what to do when you upset the prettiest, meanest girl in school.

It's tough fitting in when you're different. But what if it's the world that's weird, not you?

A beautiful, funny and honest coming-of-age story that never pretends life is perfect.

Extent:
288 pages
Dimensions:
198 x 130mm
Paperback ISBN:
9781474940634
Accelerated Reader Book Level:
4.6
Accelerated Reader Interest Level:
Upper years (UY)
Key Stage:
KS3, KS4
Publication Date:
December 2017
Work Reference:
04696
Linni Ingemundsen
Linni Ingemundsen is from Norway, though she has lived in three different countries and will never be done exploring the world. She has worked as a dishwasher in Australia, a volunteer journalist in Tanzania and has had approximately 2.5 near-death experiences. Still, what truly inspires her writing is her background growing up in a village on the south-western coast of Norway. She does not know how to draw but is somehow a freelance cartoonist. Some of her favourite things in life include chocolate, free Wi-Fi and her yellow typewriter.

Find out more about Linni Ingemundsen

Nominated

The CILIP Carnegie Medal 2019

[A] little gem of a book...

Linda Brown, School Librarian, for ReadingZone

A lovely lilting style and pace which skips alongside Malin and her dysfunctional family as their lives are unpicked through loss and pain.

Catherine Purcell for ReadingZone

Coming-of-age narratives about dysfunctional families and mean girls at school are common, but this is exceptional.

The Sunday Times

Ingemundsen's debut features a beguiling heroine at that most tricky stage of metamorphosis, from child to adult. [...] The darkening plot is dramatic without veering into sensationalism, and full of humour and pathos.

Financial Times

Offer[s] solidarity and gentle encouragement to those who find engagement with the world difficult.

The Guardian

You've added:

The Unpredictability of Being Human
£7.99
Checkout