Giant

Kate Scott author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Templar Books

Published:9th Feb '17

Should be back in stock very soon

Giant cover

'A book that celebrates friendship and the power of being true to yourself.' Frank Cottrell-Boyce

It's hard to measure up in a family with high expectations. But it's even harder when those people sometimes use you as an arm rest. And call you 'Peanut'.

Anzo is 11 years old and very, very short. Mum, Dad and his two uncles are extremely tall but they're also high achievers, obsessed with fulfilling their lifelong ambition of opening a restaurant together. Everyone has a role - but where does Anzo fit in? If only he could grow a few inches in height, then no one would be able to overlook him.

Then, overnight, Anzo starts to grow. Is life as a giant going to solve all his problems, or should he stop worrying and learn to just be himself?

Tina Fey famously said that trying to be popular at school is like working really hard to be elected Mayor of a town that will be destroyed in four years time. Giant is a fresh and funny meditation on the fickleness of peer pressure, and the pointlessness of trying to conform to its demands. Anzo is the smallest in his class. He's regularly mistaken for a nursery school child and is the automatic butt of endless 'jokes' and nicknames. When the school decides that this year's play will be Snow White, he is cast as ALL SEVEN dwarfs. All that changes when he discovers a self-help book that actually works. It makes him taller. So the teasing should stop. But it doesn't. Now he gets teased for being too tall. If that makes it sound a bit like Big - then that would be no bad thing. But Giant is very much its own book. Anzo's solution lies in his own hands - literally. He's a gifted cartoonist and his drawings are just one of the added attractions that give the book an extra depth. It also has a cast of vivid characters. Anzo's own family is warm and lively but its members are all lost in their own preoccupations - they remind me a little of Helen Cresswell's Bagthorpes. His best friend - Elise - is a sharp courageous counsellor. It's a book that celebrates friendship and the power of being true to yourself. -- Frank Cottrell Boyce
I'm always on the look out for great books to share with my boys and Giant is one of my all time favorites too. Kate Scott has got the voice of Anzo spot on and he is a very relatable character - Max certainly identified with him, especially around some of the teasing that Anzo experiences at school and as a Mum I was pleased that the book helped us to talk about topics that are sometimes difficult like feeling like you don't fit in. I also loved Anzo's best friend Elise with her many wise words and post-it notes. It was also lovely to see a well written and developed boy/girl friendship. * One More Page *
a funny, heart-warming tale of exasperating families, faithful friends and how an 11-year-old boy overcame his insecurities. * Armadillo Magazine *
Giant is one of those books you know you're just going to love - the kind you want to give a squishy hug to. Is one of those books that every kid should read. I thought this book was adorable. I wanted to keep reading about Anzo and his life, because his voice was just so raw and honest and hopeful. * Girl vs Ebooks *
a wonderful, warm and funny story about growing up and learning to believe in yourself. * Reading Zone *

ISBN: 9781848125643

Dimensions: 198mm x 130mm x 14mm

Weight: 140g

192 pages