Bone Talk
Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal (UK)Shortlisted for the Costa Prize (UK)Sunday Times Children's Book of the WeekThe Guardian Book of the MonthThe Times Books of the Year"Hotly Anticipated Historical Fiction for Young Adults" Amazon.co.uk

It is 1899. Ten year old Samkad thinks he knows everything about the world. He knows that home is in the mountains. He knows who his friends and his enemies are. And he knows that he will grow up to become a warrior like his dad, with his own shield, spear and axe.His best friend is Little Luki and she too wants to become a warrior - though there's little chance of that because she is just a girl.Then strangers arrive: a boy with many languages in his throat ... and weird-looking men called Americans who bring war and death.Set during the U.S. invasion of the Philippines.Endorsed by Amnesty International: "Amnesty International endorses Bone Talk because it upholds many human rights, including our rights to life, to equality, to have a religion, to enjoy our own culture. It also shows us what can happen when these are taken away from us."
1130033249
Bone Talk
Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal (UK)Shortlisted for the Costa Prize (UK)Sunday Times Children's Book of the WeekThe Guardian Book of the MonthThe Times Books of the Year"Hotly Anticipated Historical Fiction for Young Adults" Amazon.co.uk

It is 1899. Ten year old Samkad thinks he knows everything about the world. He knows that home is in the mountains. He knows who his friends and his enemies are. And he knows that he will grow up to become a warrior like his dad, with his own shield, spear and axe.His best friend is Little Luki and she too wants to become a warrior - though there's little chance of that because she is just a girl.Then strangers arrive: a boy with many languages in his throat ... and weird-looking men called Americans who bring war and death.Set during the U.S. invasion of the Philippines.Endorsed by Amnesty International: "Amnesty International endorses Bone Talk because it upholds many human rights, including our rights to life, to equality, to have a religion, to enjoy our own culture. It also shows us what can happen when these are taken away from us."
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Bone Talk

Bone Talk

by Candy Gourlay

Narrated by Ramón de Ocampo

Unabridged — 5 hours, 44 minutes

Bone Talk

Bone Talk

by Candy Gourlay

Narrated by Ramón de Ocampo

Unabridged — 5 hours, 44 minutes

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Overview

Shortlisted for the Carnegie Medal (UK)Shortlisted for the Costa Prize (UK)Sunday Times Children's Book of the WeekThe Guardian Book of the MonthThe Times Books of the Year"Hotly Anticipated Historical Fiction for Young Adults" Amazon.co.uk

It is 1899. Ten year old Samkad thinks he knows everything about the world. He knows that home is in the mountains. He knows who his friends and his enemies are. And he knows that he will grow up to become a warrior like his dad, with his own shield, spear and axe.His best friend is Little Luki and she too wants to become a warrior - though there's little chance of that because she is just a girl.Then strangers arrive: a boy with many languages in his throat ... and weird-looking men called Americans who bring war and death.Set during the U.S. invasion of the Philippines.Endorsed by Amnesty International: "Amnesty International endorses Bone Talk because it upholds many human rights, including our rights to life, to equality, to have a religion, to enjoy our own culture. It also shows us what can happen when these are taken away from us."

Editorial Reviews

Kirkus Reviews

2019-07-28
On the eve of his coming-of-age ritual, Samkad and his village find themselves on the verge of a changing world.

A member of the mountain tribe in 1899 Bontok, Philippines, Samkad is elated that the ancients have deemed it is his time to get the Cut, the ritual to be considered a man and a warrior. A bad omen at a preritual prompts a reading that reveals a provision: Samkad's soul is tied to Kinyo's, the son of a family friend the same age who was given to his aunt outside the village in infancy. Both must return to the village in order to proceed. Samkad's father departs to search for Kinyo while Samkad and his female friend Luki look for other ways to prove his manhood. Father returns with Kinyo, who is now also fluent in English and wears Western-style clothing, accompanied by his aunt and Mr. William, a white American. Complications arise with the appearance of more Americans soliciting help from the village amid sightings of their blood enemy, the Mangili. Samkad and his father must warily navigate who the true enemies are. Writing in Samkad's voice, Gourlay paints an intricate backdrop steeped in mystical and brutal imagery. Carefully built suspense and twists engage readers but occasionally overlook intriguing inner conflicts of characters, in particular the Americanized Kinyo and the tomboyish Luki.

A visceral coming-of-age novel examining the impacts of imperialism. (Historical fiction. 10-13)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940174049246
Publisher: Scholastic, Inc.
Publication date: 11/05/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 8 - 12 Years

Read an Excerpt

FROM THE AUTHORDear Reader, The U.S. really did invade my native Philippines in 1899. Research was hard because that period was mostly written up, not by Filipinos, but by Americans, as tourists & conquerors. Some things in my book might shock you. War is shocking. Unfamiliar culture is shocking too. But it would have been disrespectful for me to edit out the beliefs of my characters. BONE TALK is for older middle grade (OMG!) interested in identity, culture clash, colonialism and erased/forgotten histories.It will be enjoyed by fans of:They Called Us Enemy by George TakeiAmerican Born Chinese by Gene Luen YangBoxers and Saints by Gene Luen YangPersepolis by Marjane SartrapiPatron Saints of Nothing by Randy RibayChains by Laurie Halse AndersonSalt to the Sea by Ruta SepetysAll the Light We Cannot See by Anthony DoerrHello Universe by Erin Entrada Kelly Candy GourlayLondon

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