A tale of bad mothers and fragile girls, Herta Feely's latest novel sweeps the reader off her feet and onto a speeding train of a plot. I couldn't put it down. You won't be able to either.

Louise Farmer Smith, author of One Hundred Years of Marriage

<p>Herta Feely masterfully draws us into a domestic world of petty hurts that morph into pain...<br /> Mothers and daughters beware!</p>

Ellen Bryson, author of The Transformation of Bartholomew Fortuno

I did not want to put this book down. It left me thinking about it for days after. The characters are well developed and make you think about both sides of the story. It also shows the scary truth about how bullying has changed since the internet begun. As a teacher, it has made me check how to ensure I am educating my pupils on the safety of using the internet

Netgalley reader

Se alle

<i>Saving Phoebe Murrow </i>explores the motivation that drives people to take alarming steps in order to feed their own misguided agenda until the tension of the parent-teenager relationship is tested to breaking point. The real tragedy is that unless some of them remove their blinkers they will never be able to see what truly matters, or how their actions have the power to make or break others

Little Bookness Lane

This is a Jodi Picoult kind of novel, full of domestic drama and I would recommend it to people who can cope with characters who are sometimes frustrating, sometimes unlikeable but faced with the challenges and complexities of issues we are all confronted by. This is a book to generate discussion and perhaps divide opinions, but never judgement

Bibliomaniac

An addictive rollercoaster of a read to put fear in every parents heart<b></b>

The Irish Examiner

Any parent of teenage children should read this (...)This book is so readable and so believable. It details the terrible pressures that are placed on children today both by social media and peer pressure. Not only that but it also highlights how well-meaning parents can make things worse or act in terrible ways when they think their children are being criticised. This is a book that I will remember for a long time, I think it sums up the fears that every parent worries about when bringing up their children and I would advocate allowing teenagers to read this and discuss anything in it that they feel may be relevant to them with someone close

Breakaway Reviewers

Telling the story from different points of view, the author explores how a simple disagreement between two mothers dangerously affects the lives of their own children. Inspired by a true story, this is a compelling, dark and thought-provoking novel about the side effects of social media and how cyber bullying is a serious problem, especially among teenagers

Chick Lit Club

I really enjoyed the author's well-paced and detailed writing style and already look forward to Herta Feely's next novel. On the whole, 'Saving Phoebe Murrow' is a compelling contemporary read, perfect for women's fiction fans; an intriguing and well-written story and a read that actually managed to surprised me!

A Spoonful of Happy Endings

I was glued to every page. I was drawn in by all the characters. I highly recommend Saving Phoebe Murrow it's totally unputdownable. I have enjoyed every page of this novel so much that I am certainly going to read Herta Feely's next book

I Read Novels

<i>Saving Phoebe Murrow</i> explores the motivation that drives people to take alarming steps in order to feed their own misguided agenda until the tension of the parent-teenager relationship is tested to breaking point. The real tragedy is that unless some of them remove their blinkers they will never be able to see what truly matters, or how their actions have the power to make or break others

Little Bookness Lane

Gripping, riveting, and deeply disturbing on many levels. This one will stick with you for quite a while

The Writing Train

HAVE YOU EVER TRIED TO BE THE PERFECT MOTHER?A timeless story of mothers and daughters with a razor-sharp 21st century twist, this heart-wrenching debut for fans of Jodi Picoult, Jane Shemilt and The Slap by Christos Tsiolkas will make you question how you and your family spend time onlineIsabel Murrow is precariously balancing her career and her family. Hard-working and caring, worried but supportive, all Isobel wants, in a perilous world of bullies and temptations, is to keep her daughter Phohebe safe.Phoebe has just attempted suicide. She says it is Isabel's fault.Saving Phoebe Murrow is a timely tale about an age-old problem - how best to raise our children, and how far to go in keeping them from harm. Set amidst the complicated web of relationships at the school gate, it tells a story of miscommunication and malice, drugs and Facebook, prejudice and revenge.
Les mer
A timeless story of mothers and daughters with a razor-sharp 21st century twist
A tale of bad mothers and fragile girls, Herta Feely's latest novel sweeps the reader off her feet and onto a speeding train of a plot. I couldn't put it down. You won't be able to either.
A timeless story of mothers and daughters with a razor-sharp 21st century twist
Based on a true story from the US, where teenager Megan Meier was driven to suicide after a very similar cyber attack

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781785770340
Publisert
2016-10-20
Utgiver
Vendor
Twenty7
Vekt
332 gr
Høyde
200 mm
Bredde
130 mm
Dybde
25 mm
Aldersnivå
G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
416

Forfatter

Om bidragsyterne

Herta Feely is a writer and full-time editor, working with a wide array of authors and writers from around the world. Born in former Yugoslavia, she and her parents emigrated to Germany when she was three, and then to the United States at the age of seven. Her work (both short stories and memoir) have been published in a number of anthologies and literary journals, and she has received the American Independent Writers' award for best published personal essay. In her previous work, she was a journalist, press secretary and activist, co-founding Safe Kids Worldwide, an organization dedicated to saving children from unintentional injuries.

She now lives in Washington, DC, with her husband and two cats, Monty and Albert. She has two sons, Jack and Max.