๐”– Bobbio Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

Cover of Adrian Mole Diaries

Adrian Mole Diaries

โœ Scribed by Townsend, Sue


Book ID
108076552
Publisher
Avon
Year
1985
Tongue
English
Weight
120 KB
Series
Adrian Mole 1
Category
Fiction

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

โœฆ Synopsis


Synopsis:

Adrian Mole faces the same agonies that life sets before most adolescents: trouble s with girls, school, parents, and an uncaring world. The difference, though, between young Master Mole and his peers is that this British lad keeps a diaryโ€”an earnest chronicle of longing and disaster that has charmed more than five million readers since its two-volume initial publication. From teenaged Adrianโ€™s anguished adoration of a lovely, mercurial schoolmate to his view of his parentsโ€™ constantly creaking relationship to his heartfelt but hilarious attempts at cathartic verse, here is an outrageous triumph of deadpanโ€”and deadly accurateโ€”satire. ABBA, Princess Diโ€™s wedding, street punks, Monty Python, the Falklands campaign . . . all the cultural pageantry of a keenly observed era marches past the unique perspective of Sue Townsendโ€™s brilliant comic creation: A . Mole, the unforgettable lad whose self-absorption only gets funnier as his life becomes more desperate.

Publishers Weekly:

Adrian is 13 years old when we get our first look at his diary, and he has a spot on his chin. For the next two and a half years, dozens of wearisome spots plague him, along with the vitamin-deficient meals his parents supply, his horror of physical exercise and the length of his ``thing,'' which he measures indefatigably. An insatiable reader, he inquires of the cultural department at the BBC how to become an Intellectual, an enterprise hobbled by the superior brilliance of his girfriend Pandora, who prefers to be called Box. But his solipsistic preoccupations are interrupted by his mother's affair with the next-door neighbor, his father's with the woman down the block, his father's job redundancy and subsequent problems with the Dole, and especially by the demands of Bert Baxter, an old-age pensioner whom Adrian, as a member of the Good Samaritans, has agreed to visit. This is nothing, however, to the blow to his pride when his mother becomes pregnant and gives birth to a baby who seems to make Adrian himself redundant. Townsend's wry depiction of Adrian's adolescence should make even the soberest reader laugh out loud. But underneath the humor there are provocative thoughts about family relationships and contemporary society. In Britain, the books (the original and a sequel, here combined into one volume) sold some five million copies, inspired a long-running musical and a TV miniseries, and made Adrian Mole a household name. (May)

Biography:

Sue Townsend is the author of The Queen and I and The Adrian Mole books. She lives in England.


๐Ÿ“œ SIMILAR VOLUMES


cover
โœ Townsend, Sue ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 1985 ๐Ÿ› Avon ๐ŸŒ English โš– 103 KB

**Synopsis:** Adrian Mole faces the same agonies that life sets before most adolescents: trouble s with girls, school, parents, and an uncaring world. The difference, though, between young Master Mole and his peers is that this British lad keeps a diaryโ€”an earnest chronicle of longing and disaster

cover
โœ Townsend, Sue ๐Ÿ“‚ Fiction ๐Ÿ“… 1971 ๐Ÿ› Perennial ๐ŸŒ en-GB โš– 86 KB

Adrian Mole faces the same agonies which life sets before most adolescents: troubles with girls, school, parents, and an uncaring world. The difference, though, between young Master Mole and his peers is that this British lad keeps a diary -- an earnest chronicle of longing and disaster that has con