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Apples
Apples | Richard Milward
1 post | 2 read | 1 to read
Adapted for stage, Apples is set on a Middlesbrough council estate, this astonishing piece of writing by 23-year-old Richard Milward, is an electrifying collision of Irvine Welsh and Virginia Woolf. Streams of poetic, impassioned and often hilarious words pour from five fifteen year olds as they negotiate a world where the adults are absent, drugs are everywhere, sex is desperate and life is both terrifying and thrilling. A dazzling, tragicomic love story of adolescence based on the astonishing debut novel by Richard Milward. Shameless, ruthless and intensely poetic, Apples articulates what it is like to be young. Apples was the winner of the coveted Bank of Scotland Herald Angel Award at the 2010 Edinburgh Fringe Festival. The prize is awarded for excellence in the Edinburgh Festival. ‘Catcher in the Rye meets Arctic Monkeys.’ - The Times ‘This superb stage version of Richard Milward's debut novel is - like an underage Trainspotting - an upbeat and sometimes even joyous affair that suggests that for all the trials and tribulations of the teenage years, the kids are probably going to be OK.’ - Lyn Gardner, The Guardian ‘Adaptor and director John Retallack's version works very well. Anyone wanting to understand - or, at any rate, to begin to understand - the pressures young people face in growing up at the bottom of our society's heap should see Apples. But don't expect an enjoyable evening of theatre - moving, illuminating, superbly well done, certainly, but "enjoyable" is definitely not the right word!’ - British Theatre Guide ‘A superb stage version of Richard Milward's debut novel... It's a funny-sad, ugly-beautiful night out, nicely performed by its young cast and swirling with the sweaty, dirty poetry of everyday life. 4 stars’ - Lyn Gardner, The Guardian
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Bookworm-Bobbie
Apples | Richard Milward
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Talking about unlikeable protagonists, my friend suggested this.

'As a distraction from sleazy male admirers, spiteful classmates and her mother's cancer, Eve's eyes are opened to a multicolour life of one-night stands, drug-fuelled discos and cheap plonk. She barely has time to notice Adam.'

Any other books where the protagonist was unlikeable but you enjoyed the book?

Reviewsbylola One that springs to mind was Siracusa. No one was particularly likeable, but I LOVED the book. Usually an unlikeable protaganist doesn't bother me, but it can depending on the circumstances. (edited) 7y
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