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The best medicine / Christine Hamill.

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: Dublin : Little Island, 2016.Description: 167 pages ; 20 cmISBN:
  • 9781910411513 (pbk.) :
Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 823.92 23
Summary: Philip is 12 years old and life is pretty good. He gets on with his mum and gets by pretty well at school - in spite of girl problems, teacher problems, bully problems and - er - poetry problems. Philip's happy-go-lucky life is disrupted when his mother gets breast cancer. Bad enough that your mother is seriously ill - but could she not have developed a less embarrassing kind of cancer - toe cancer, maybe, or ear cancer? Philip's attempt to cope with his situation are both hilarious and touching. Through it all, he's writing letters to his hero, the comedian Harry Hill, looking for advice. Harry Hill remains stonily silent, and Philip has to get by without his advice. In the end, though, Harry Hill comes up trumps, Philip gets to do a comedy routine with him, and Philip's mum and her cancer-mates get to have a good time too.
List(s) this item appears in: Everyday Stories | Humour
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Call number Status Date due Barcode
Fiction The Harden Library, King's Hospital Fiction Classic F HAM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available R15021Y0499
Fiction The Harden Library, King's Hospital Fiction Section F HAM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available r15013a0499
Fiction The Harden Library, King's Hospital Fiction Section F HAM (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available R14957N0499

Philip is 12 years old and life is pretty good. He gets on with his mum and gets by pretty well at school - in spite of girl problems, teacher problems, bully problems and - er - poetry problems. Philip's happy-go-lucky life is disrupted when his mother gets breast cancer. Bad enough that your mother is seriously ill - but could she not have developed a less embarrassing kind of cancer - toe cancer, maybe, or ear cancer? Philip's attempt to cope with his situation are both hilarious and touching. Through it all, he's writing letters to his hero, the comedian Harry Hill, looking for advice. Harry Hill remains stonily silent, and Philip has to get by without his advice. In the end, though, Harry Hill comes up trumps, Philip gets to do a comedy routine with him, and Philip's mum and her cancer-mates get to have a good time too.

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