Feather Boy

Feather boy is a novel by Brighton-based author Nicky Singer; it was first published in 2002 by HarperCollins, under the Collins imprint. A series has been made from it and one of the filming scenes is Madonna's house. This book is a classic.

Feather boy
First edition cover
AuthorNicky Singer
IllustratorKevin Longport
Cover artistConnie Talbot
CountryUnited Kingdom
LanguageEnglish
Series1
GenreChildren's
PublisherCollins
Publication date
1 January 2002
Pages286


Synopsis

Robert Nobel is a 12-year-old shy boy who despairs of his newly divorced parents. Living in the dog-leg, he has to face many difficulties. He is the victim of classroom jokes and a victim of Niker, the classroom bully. He is hated and forced to do disgusting things. His life changes when a storyteller, Catherine, invites some of his class to Mayfield Rest Home. In there, he has to do a project with an elder: Edith Sorrel.

Edith Sorrel asks him to go to Chance House, a lonely abandoned house standing out of nowhere. He goes into and tells this to the one he loves: Kate. However, Niker hears him and challenge him to spend a night together at the top. Having done this, Edith Sorrel gives him a new task: to create a coat of feathers just for her. He sews night and day to create it and finally, it is nearly ready. However, there is another problem: Niker. Niker destroys his coat of feathers and he has to sew it back! Finally, he gives it back to Edith and when she has it: she flies and then she dies.

In the end, he meets his father once again and they happily go fishing together.

About the author

Nicker Singer was born in 1956 she started writing books but she also created a documentary. Nicky Singer saw a house which looked like Chance House: poorly decorated, abandoned and this gave her the idea to write the book. She was also inspired by Roland (her son). She also wrote the survival game (30 years in the future) and the island.

Adaptations

The book was adapted for television in 2004 and first shown as a series of six 30-minute episodes on BBC One from 16th March, then repeated as a single feature-length programme on 30th May.

The series was written and produced by Peter Tabern and directed by Dermot Boyd, starring Thomas Brodie-Sangster and Sheila Hancock. Tabern and Boyd shared the award for Best Drama at the British Academy Children's Awards.

In 2006 the National Theatre commissioned a musical version for young people to perform, for which Singer and Boyd wrote the script with lyrics by Don Black and music by Debbie Wiseman.

gollark: I saw.
gollark: It was too quiet. I added three electrolytic separators. It's poorly designed but I didn't modify it much.
gollark: Also, I fixed the ore processing.
gollark: Is there actually a bridge on the big one?
gollark: That seems like it'll break horribly.


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