The Exiles At Home

by Hilary McKay

Paperback, 2007

Status

Available

Call number

823.914

Collection

Publication

Margaret K. McElderry Books (2007), Edition: First Edition, 208 pages

Description

The four Conroy sisters' efforts to raise money in order to sponsor a ten-year-old boy in Africa get them into one difficult situation after another.

User reviews

LibraryThing member jrhaase
Book Reviews
The Exiles at Home
Hilary McKay

“You’ve bought an illegal boy in Africa?” asked Naomi, amazed. “You can’t buy people! And anyhow, you never have any money, none of us do! What are you going to do about it?”
The school term is just beginning for the four Conroy girls, and from
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the beginning, things start happening.
Is it just chance that Ruth Conroy happens to go to the library and fills out a form saying that she wants to sponsor a child in Africa for ten pounds a month?
However, after sending away all of her Christmas money, Ruth becomes in desperate need of money. So she lets her older sister Naomi in on the secret, and then her two younger sisters, Rachel and Phoebe. With all of them trying to get money, their grandmother and mother begin to get suspicious at their urgent requirements, and unless they can get the money in time, their secret won’t be a secret for very long.
This book will interest ages 8-15.
I enjoyed reading ‘The Exiles at Home’ because you immediately want to read more of the story as it is humorous and compelling.
Some other books by this author are:
· The Exiles
· The Exiles in Love
· Indigo’s Star
· Saffy’s Angel
· Permanent Rose
I would rate this book 3 stars out of 5 for it’s excellent and interesting storyline.
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LibraryThing member Kaethe
The cover says "earnest", and also "heartfelt", maybe even "moving". What it doesn't say is "funny". It's the British Penderwicks, not a problem novel about a parent off at war. But just for fun, feel free to share what the cover image makes you think the book will be about.

Library copy
LibraryThing member Herenya
Ruth embarks on sponsoring a child in Africa, but struggles to find enough money each month. One by one, her sisters join her in finding unconventional ways to raise money.

This is humorous, and also moving. McKay captures family life in a very believable, very lively way. As I said about The
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Exiles
, the four Conroy sisters are delightful -- hilarious, believable and relatably bookish. I loved this.“No one ever gets good reports at our school,” replied Ruth. “Mine was the best in the class, actually. We all opened them and looked.”
“Yours is disgraceful,” said her mother and read aloud, “‘Ruth's work suffers from an almost total lack of planning. Her homework is rarely completed on time and she appears to spend a great deal of the school day in a dream!’”
“What’s wrong with being in a dream?” asked Ruth. “It’s a survival technique. Anyway, mine’s better than Naomi’s. Hers doesn’t even make sense!”
Naomi’s report had puzzled everyone. It said that Naomi was one of the worst-motivated boys in the class and made no real attempt at any subject except football. Mrs Conroy read it again and passed it to Big Grandma, who had arrived that day to spend Christmas with the family.
“Frightful handwriting,” commented Big Grandma cheerfully, who had once been a teacher herself. “Still, you must remember that it was probably written at dead of night by an exhausted, underpaid teacher, almost certainly driven mad by lack of sleep…”
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Original language

English

Original publication date

1993

Physical description

208 p.; 5.5 inches

ISBN

141696729X / 9781416967293
Page: 0.2486 seconds