Eddie & the Gang with No Name

The Eddie & the Gang with No Name series is a trilogy of young-adult novels, written by Northern Irish author Colin Bateman. The trilogy surrounds a twelve-year-old Eddie and his affiliation with a local gang, the "Reservoir Pups". The trilogy was bought by the publisher Random House for release in America. However, given the drug-related content in the third installment of the series, Random House decided to publish only the first two novels.[1]

Eddie & the Gang with No Name
Reservoir Pups
Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett
The Seagulls Have Landed
AuthorColin Bateman
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
GenreCrime, young adult
PublisherHodder Children's
Media typePrint
No. of books3

Characters

  • Eddie Malone – thirteen-year-old boy, protagonist of the story.
  • Eddie's mum – mother of Eddie and heavily pregnant with Scuttles' child.
  • Bernard Scuttles – chief of hospital security and boyfriend of Eddie's mum.
  • Mo – female albino best friend of Eddie.
Since Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett
  • Gary Gilmore – friend of Eddie who is fond of explosives and explosions in general.
  • Pat – runaway orphan, friend of Eddie.
  • Sean – also a runaway orphan and friend of Eddie.

Reservoir Pups

Reservoir Pups
AuthorColin Bateman
Publication date
13 November 2003
Pages312
ISBN9780340877807
OCLC52921494

Reservoir Pups (also known as Running with the Reservoir Pups) is the first novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Colin Bateman, published on 13 November 2003 through Hodder Children's Books.[2] It is Bateman's first young adult novel.

Plot

In 1978 Eddie's father leaves his mother to run away with her boss, a doctor. His mother finds herself a new nursing job at the Royal Victoria Maternity Hospital, however it's located in a run-down section of Belfast; the pair move there regardless. A short time after they arrive, Scuttles, the chief of hospital security, accuses Eddie of scamming the locals and of being part of a neighbourhood gang, the "Reservoir Pups".

Given that all the people in his life believe he is already part of the gang, Eddie decides to join. He is tasked with stealing the security codes from Scuttles' computer and while attempting to do so, hears of a plot to kidnap twelve babies from the hospital nursery, abandoning his mission. Returning to the gang, Eddie is ostracised for his failure to complete his task and he is told to "watch his back". Eddie then sets out to foil the kidnapping himself.

Reservoir Pups characters

  • Captain Black – paraplegic boy and leader of the gang.
  • Alison Beech – owner of the cosmetics company that is attempting to kidnap the babies.

Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett

Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett
AuthorColin Bateman
Publication date
13 May 2004
Pages315
ISBN9780340877814
OCLC55021694

Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett is the second novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, published on 13 May 2004 through Hodder Children's Books.[3] The story was initially written in 199596 as a feature film script aimed at adults. It was sold in 1996 although, as of 2012, no further information has been released.[4] When Bateman was attempting to write the sequel to Reservoir Pups, he found this script, "threw most of it out"; and re-aimed it at the young-adult audience.[5]

Plot

Two runaway orphans, Pat and Sean, witness the theft of Saint Oliver Plunketts head from St. Peter's Church where it was on display for a forthcoming papal visit. Pat speaks to the primate of the church and discovers that he will be greatly embarrassed by the disappearance; Pat decides to help as he is feeling guilty for not preventing the crime initially. The orphans enlist the help of Eddie and his best-friend Mo in their task. Eddie and Mo, meanwhile, have been involved in some tasks for the Reservoir Pups which coincidentally involve the son of Scarface Cutler; a blind boy named Ivan and son of the thief in possession of the head.

Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett characters

  • The primate – stands to be greatly embarrassed by the loss of the head.
  • Scarface Cutler – violent criminal and holder of Plunkett's head.
  • Ivan – blind son of Cutler.

The Seagulls Have Landed

The Seagulls Have Landed
AuthorColin Bateman
Publication date
19 May 2005
Pages458
ISBN9780340877821
OCLC60521133

The Seagulls Have Landed is the third novel of the Eddie & the Gang with No Name trilogy by Northern Irish author, Colin Bateman, published on 19 May 2005 through Hodder Children's Books.[6] Random House decided not to publish the book in America due to the drug-related content in this instalment of the series.[1]

Plot

Eddies loses his newborn half-brother and enlists his gang with no name to help him find him. In doing so Eddie discovers that a gang named The Seagulls, which is the nickname for a large number of immigrants fleeing a natural disaster, are distributing a highly addictive drug called Crush. Eddie and his gang try to stop them whilst finding his lost brother in the process.[7]

gollark: If it's just entirely random, the vast majority of matches will probably be with people you do not actually like.
gollark: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knuth's_up-arrow_notation
gollark: It's up-arrow notation or something, for making unreasonably large numbers.
gollark: I apparently cannot convince anyone who has any actual power to change it that this is a bad idea.
gollark: [EDUCATIONAL INSTITUTION EXPUNGED], which I go to, has apparently decided that it is now "post-pandemic" times and has rolled back basically every COVID-19 mitigation thing except having hand sanitizer dispensers and lateral flow tests, including returning to densely packing (mostly unmasked) people into poorly ventilated rooms to watch stuff which is just livestreamed over the internet™ now anyway.

References

  1. "The Seagulls have Landed". Colin Bateman. Archived from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
  2. Reservoir Pups (Book, 2003). WorldCat. OCLC 52921494.
  3. Bring Me the Head of Oliver Plunkett (Book, 2004). WorldCat. OCLC 55021694.
  4. Moriarty, Gerry (27 June 1996). "Old punk, fresh talent". The Irish Times. HighBeam Research. Archived from the original on 14 March 2016. Retrieved 8 May 2012.(subscription required)
  5. Bateman, Colin. "Official website". Archived from the original on 4 March 2012. Retrieved 8 May 2012.
  6. The seagulls have landed (Book, 2005). WorldCat. OCLC 60521133.
  7. "The Seagulls Have Landed by Colin Bateman". Fantastic Fiction. Retrieved 15 May 2012.
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