welcome to
 Aussiereviews.com

 
  Reviewing the best of Australian books, films, music websites and more.

Home
See All Reviews
Free update
Links
Feedback
Link to us

see all...





Aussie Authors
Links to Australian authors on the net.
Picture Books
See all reviews for children's picture books.
Children's Books
See all reviews of children's novels and chapter books.
Young Adult Fiction
See all reviews of young adult titles.
Fiction
See all reviews of adult fiction.
Nonfiction
See all reviews of non-fiction titles.
DVD and Video
See all video and DVD reviews.
Music and Software
See all music and software reviews.
Educational texts
See all reviews of educational texts.
Audiobooks
See all reviews of audiobook titles.

  

YA Book Review: Peeling the Onion, by Wendy Orr
Reviewed by Sally Murphy

Fifteenth reprint of this gripping tale.



Jenny rushes in; stops and turns pale at the sight of my scaffolded neck. This isn’t what she expected to see – and for a moment Jenny, sunny, effervescent, ever-optimistic Jenny, stares at me and can’t speak.
‘They made a mistake – I broke my neck after all.’

Anna is on the way to the top. She’s won another karate competition, and this year she’ll go for her back belt. And she’s just shared her first kiss with Hayden, who could well be the love of her life. But Anna’s life is shattered when she and Hayden are in a car accident. He’s fine, but she’s in hospital with multiple injuries, including a broken neck, and a long road to recovery ahead of her.

As Anna deals with the pain of her injuries and the reality that her life will never be the same again, she discovers that there is no such thing as 'normal'. Things that once seemed so normal no longer matter to her; things which never concerned her now matter a lot. And her friendships and relationship are changing, too. Anna wonders if she’ll ever put herself back together again.

Peeling the Onion is an absorbing first-person account of Anna’s journey through the healing process – both physical and emotional. Anna is a likeable character and the use of first person narration allows the reader to see her strengths, her weaknesses and her insecurities in an intimate way.

This is the fifteenth time this book has been reprinted since its first release in 1996, a testament to its appeal.

Peeling the Onion

Peeling the Onion, by Wendy Orr
Allen & Unwin, 1996, this edition 2006

You can buy this book online at Fishpond.

Also by Wendy Orr

Mokie and Bik (2006)
Across the Dark Sea (2006)
Spook’s Shack (2003)

 Sponsored by:

The Floatingest Frog, by Sally Murphy, illustrated by Simon Bosch
Available now from New Frontier Publishing