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Bad Dreams by Anne Fine β€” book cover

Bad Dreams

by Anne Fine, Susannah Harker
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Overview

This is a highly original tale about a young girl's ability to turn dreams into reality. Is it a gift or is it a curse?

Award-winning author Anne Fine has written many other books including 'Goggle-Eyes', 'Flour Babies' and 'Madame Doubtfire'.

Despite her preference for books over friends, Melanie gradually becomes involved with a new classmate and determined to find the reason for her strange behavior.

Synopsis

This is a highly original tale about a young girl's ability to turn dreams into reality. Is it a gift or is it a curse?

Award-winning author Anne Fine has written many other books including 'Goggle-Eyes', 'Flour Babies' and 'Madame Doubtfire'.

Publishers Weekly

Although not as ambitious as some of Fine's previous novels (The Tulip Touch; Alias Madame Doubtfire), this thriller featuring a preteen with supernatural powers will hook readers until the last page. Melanie, the deliberately unsympathetic narrator, has no friends--and doesn't mind, because she prefers reading to being with people. Her teacher assigns her to help out a new girl, Imogen, and Melanie quickly grows interested in Imogen's odd behavior. Whenever Imogen touches the cover of a book, she seems to know what will happen to the characters inside, even to feel their emotions. She can also predict people's futures by holding their photographs. Witnessing Imogen's torment in foreseeing events and suffering along with fictional characters, Melanie is convinced that Imogen's magical powers are a curse, not a blessing. Despite Imogen's protestations, Melanie is determined to do whatever it takes to rid Imogen of her "gifts." Experienced readers will know early on that Imogen's magic is linked to the odd necklace she always wears, but other elements here remain vague. Neither Imogen nor her mother, who horrifies Melanie with her fixation on magic, is well fleshed out, and the significance of the necklace challenges some of the narrative logic (e.g., Why is Imogen oblivious to its effect?). But Fine's storytelling dwarfs such flaws. Drawing readers into the complexities of Melanie's decision, she produces a subtle and absorbing tale. Ages 10-up. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

About the Author, Anne Fine

Anne Fine is a two-time winner of the prestigious Carnegie Medal and the author of many acclaimed books for children, including Flour Babies, The Tulip Touch, and the Robin Williams movie hit Mrs. Doubtfire.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Although not as ambitious as some of Fine's previous novels (The Tulip Touch; Alias Madame Doubtfire), this thriller featuring a preteen with supernatural powers will hook readers until the last page. Melanie, the deliberately unsympathetic narrator, has no friends--and doesn't mind, because she prefers reading to being with people. Her teacher assigns her to help out a new girl, Imogen, and Melanie quickly grows interested in Imogen's odd behavior. Whenever Imogen touches the cover of a book, she seems to know what will happen to the characters inside, even to feel their emotions. She can also predict people's futures by holding their photographs. Witnessing Imogen's torment in foreseeing events and suffering along with fictional characters, Melanie is convinced that Imogen's magical powers are a curse, not a blessing. Despite Imogen's protestations, Melanie is determined to do whatever it takes to rid Imogen of her "gifts." Experienced readers will know early on that Imogen's magic is linked to the odd necklace she always wears, but other elements here remain vague. Neither Imogen nor her mother, who horrifies Melanie with her fixation on magic, is well fleshed out, and the significance of the necklace challenges some of the narrative logic (e.g., Why is Imogen oblivious to its effect?). But Fine's storytelling dwarfs such flaws. Drawing readers into the complexities of Melanie's decision, she produces a subtle and absorbing tale. Ages 10-up. (June) Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

School Library Journal

Gr 4-6-Melanie gets along with books better than with people, and she likes it that way. Thus, she is less than pleased when her teacher asks her to help out the new girl, especially when she finds that Imogen is reluctant to spend any time reading. However, it soon becomes clear that Imogen's aversion is especially unusual: she seems to be able to predict stories before she reads them, and is extraordinarily empathetic with the characters. Melanie takes on the task of detecting and exorcising her classmate's curse not out of any deep-rooted friendship, but because she can't bear to see anyone so frightened by a book. It also becomes clear to her that clingy Imogen's unpopularity has to do with a necklace she always wears. Sure enough, when Melanie does away with the family heirloom during a swim meet and frees Imogen from its spell, she frees herself from the commitment of being "best friends," and is finally left in peace, alone. This quick and easy read is predictable, but fun, and Melanie's wryly independent character lends a unique and comically twisted tone to this novel that should appeal both to fans of school stories and magic.-Nina Lindsay, Oakland Public Library, CA Copyright 2000 Cahners Business Information.|

Childrens Book Watch

Anne Fine's Bad Dreams tells of Melanie, whoseteacher asks her to oversee a new girl's introduction to the school. Mel is a book reader, not used to associating with her peers; but a mystery draws her to a new friend in trouble. Debbie Dadey's Cherokee Sister (32703-X, $14.95) paints an unusual friendship between two girls in pioneer days. Allie's best friend is Cherokee, but increasingly oppressive acts against her friend's people involves her in an unexpected nightmare in this story of friendship and oppression. Nancy Antle's Playing Solitaire (2406-3, $16.99) tells of a girl's slow adjustment to a new life when her grandfather and her rejection of an abusive father. Ellie always expects her father to return to her life; when she suspects he's stalking her, trouble results. Randall Beth Platt's Likes Of Me (32692-0, $15.95) is hard to easily categorize and begins slowly, but grows on the reader. Cordy is a half-Chinese albino girl living in a logging camp in 1918. When she meets the dashing boy Squirl she embarks on a journey which will take her far from home and which will change her mind about friendships and love. Mature teens will find this refreshingly different and filled with insights about relationships, with spunky Cordy at the helm.
β€”Childrens Book Watch

Kirkus Reviews

The air of strangeness hanging about a new classmate turns out to have just cause in this tale of a bookworm and a child cursed with a unique kind of second sight. "Cursed" is the right word, for not only can't Imogen help seeing what's in store for living people, but just touching a book, even a novel, makes her an unwilling participant in whatever terrors or tensions the story inside bears. Observing the reactions Imogen can't quite conceal, Melanie gradually figures out her terrible secret and its causeβ€”an odd necklace passed down to Imogen by her otherworldly mother. Though Imogen refuses to see it, whenever she takes the necklace off, she becomes a different person, gregarious and free. Melanie faces a tough decision: to keep her nose in her beloved books and out of what is, after all, not her business, or find a way to separate Imogen from the talisman and dispose of it? With some reluctance, Mel concocts a secret, clever plan, only to find in the suspenseful climax that the necklace has powerful defenses of its own that require some unexpected sacrifices to overcome. As in The Tulip Touch (1997), Fine has placed two young people with unusually complex motives and characters into a challenging, sometimes scary situation: readers will not be putting this one down until the last page. (Fiction. 10-12)

Book Details

Published
August 1, 2010
Publisher
AudioGO
Format
MP3 Book
ISBN
9781408449721

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