Home
Blood Red Road Banner Ad
  • Home
  • Latest Issue
  • Past Issues
  • Authors & Artists
  • Articles
  • Reviews
  • News
  • Forums
  • Search

The Road of Bones

Digital version – browse, print or download

BfK Newsletter

Receive the latest news & reviews direct to your inbox!

BfK No. 166 - September 2007

Cover Story
This issue’s cover illustration by Kev Walker is from William Nicholson’s Noman. William Nicholson is interviewed by Clive Barnes. Thanks to Egmont for their help with this September cover.

  • PDFPDF
  • Printer-friendly versionPrinter-friendly version
  • Send to friendSend to friend
  • Login or register to bookmark

The Road of Bones

Anne Fine
(Corgi Childrens)
256pp, 978-0552554930, RRP £5.99, Paperback
10-14 Middle/Secondary
Buy "The Road of Bones" on Amazon

‘When a man’s youth has been kicked and starved out of him, it can’t be put back.’ It is with this reflection that we leave Yuri at the end of Fine’s superb novel, having followed him on a journey in which all innocence has had to be shed, even to the extent that now he wants ‘to get away from my new self.’ While no specific countries or historical epochs are named, parallels between the boy’s story and certain events of the 20th-century Soviet Union will strike some readers, but it is the wider, more allegorical, applications of that story that are really at the novel’s centre. Here, employing the patterning of mythic quest stories, Fine’s narrative reveals the manner in which brutalisation can easily topple into brutality; the oppressed threatens to become the oppressor. In Yuri’s case the cycle starts as he listens, as a 12-year-old boy, to his grandmother’s memories of state harassment and persecution and continues when, in an attempt to escape punishment for speaking out against the regime’s totalitarianism, he runs away. In turn, this is the prelude to a trek across vast and unyielding landscapes in which he suffers almost unbearable hardship and degradation, frequently described in terms which some young readers may find harrowing. He eventually emerges from these experiences to tell his story – but at a great personal price and still recalling, years afterwards, one of his grandmother’s favourite proverbs: ‘Only a fool cheers when the new prince rises.’ At a time when too many children’s novels are too easily complimented on being ‘thought-provoking’ it is a welcome change to encounter one which genuinely merits such praise.

Reviewer: 
Robert Dunbar
5
  • About us
  • Contact us
  • Help/FAQ
  • My Account
website developed by purkiss