- Published: 4 July 2013
- ISBN: 9781448165216
- Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 256
Closed Doors
- Published: 4 July 2013
- ISBN: 9781448165216
- Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 256
The dissonance between what a child narrator knows and what adult readers can make out is fully exploited here to great effect, and is reminiscent of Emma Donoghue’s Room … [A] compulsive read, grounded in a realism which, depicted through a child’s eyes – with that hint of a child’s surreal perception – gathers together violence, humour and love in a most believable way.
Scotland on Sunday, Book of the Week
O’Donnell makes you feel the frustration of an intelligent child who knows he's being kept in the dark … There’s loss of innocence here, but the overwhelming tone is warm and sparky; O’Donnell shows how a shattered family can remake itself, and Michael's narrative voice is delightful – observant, thoughtful, comical and thoroughly believable.
Kate Saunders, The Times
A sweet and uplifting read that celebrates the messy, complicated business of family. Michael is a lively and endearing narrator.
Daily Mail
[A] coming-of-age novel … Closed Doors provides an engaging child’s eye view of a working-class community that is nuanced and insightful.
The Herald
A skilfully told story of a boy’s struggle to come to terms with family secrets and their potentially terrible consequences . A sharp, witty and heartbreaking second novel from a dynamic new talent.
Kitty Aldridge, author of A TRICK I LEARNED FROM DEAD MEN
Sweet and sad, this is a coming-of-age story with dark secrets - and love- at its heart.
Karen Campbell, author of THIS IS WHERE I AM
A sensitive and sometimes heart-rending evocation of what it was like to grow up in the 1980s ... Part coming of age novel, part crime novel, Closed Doors will remind all its readers of what it was like to be a child in a world where flawed adults make all the decisions.
We Love This Book
Impressive … A hugely accomplished piece of storytelling.
Doug Johnstone, Big Issue
Lisa O’Donnell’s dazzling new novel … Like Roddy Doyle’s Paddy Clarke Ha Ha Ha and Black Swan Green by David Mitchell, O’Donnell’s novel effectively evokes the carefree joys of adolescence as well as all of its terrors, real and imagined … O’Donnell perfectly navigates the distance between what Michael understands and what her readers do … O’Donnell’s great talent is most apparent in her depiction of the gap between Michael’s thoughts and his actions … a moving story that stakes a lasting, and disturbing, emotional claim on her readers.
New York Times Book Review
O'Donnell captures perfectly the distance between perception and reality in a child's view of the world.
Mail on Sunday
This wonderful book explores the loss of innocence through a child's eyes. I loved it.
Jenny Green, The Sun