Crongton Knights

Author(s): Alex Wheatle

Young Adult

Living on the South Crongton council estate has its worries - and life for McKay has been even tougher since his mum died.


His dad has been working all hours to keep the bailiffs from their door.


His brother is always out riding the streets at night, tempting trouble.


And now, having strayed off his turf on a 'heroic' (if misguided) mission to help out a girl, McKay finds himself facing a friend's crazy ex-boyfriend, some power-tripping hood-rats and a notoriously violent gangster with a vendetta which hits too close to home.


Poor McKay. He never asked for trouble . . . But during one madcap night of adventure and danger, he will find out who his true friends are and what it means to stick with your family.


Crongton Knights is a very funny, very moving story that shows that although life is testing, the lessons learned the hard way are the ones you'll never forget.


Crongton Knights by Alex Wheatle is a gritty story about a group of kids surviving in the tough environment of a British housing estate. Their parents are struggling working class, single parents, immigrants, refugees, religious, hard-working and sometimes traumatised by gang violence, poverty and the struggle to enable their children to climb out of the cycle of class disadvantage. The focus of this story is  a group of 14/15-year-olds who hang out together, trying to keep out of trouble - easy to say, very difficult to do. This is McKay’s story. His dad is gambling, the debt collectors are at the door, his older brother is out cruising for trouble and he’s left at home to cook and to keep the door closed. Author Alex Wheatle won the Guardian Prize for Children for this novel in 2016. And while it’s gritty and dealing with some hard issues, it’s also a testament to loyalty, watching out for your friends, and to growing up the best way you can. Wheatle doesn’t shy away from the hard world these kids live in, yet he brings humour and the rich canvas of their lives to the fore, creating a riveting as well as hopeful novel. This is the second in this series. The first is Liccle Bit, the story of McKay’s friend Lemar and his fascination with the beautiful Venetia (the third will focus on Lemar’s feisty sister, Elaine). In Crongton, McKay is swept into a quest to help a girl recover her mobile phone from another turf. To get there, the band of friends must pass through the unfriendly territories of North Crongton and head up to Notre Dame. All goes as well, apart from being robbed by a rogue gang, until they cross paths with an enemy of McKay’s brother. Then things get tricky and dangerous. You’ll be crossing your fingers for McKay and his friends who seem stuck in the cross-hairs of gang warfare and petty retributions.

{STELLA}


Product Information

Winner of Guardian Children's Fiction Prize 2016.

Born in 1963 to Jamaican parents living in Brixton, ALEX WHEATLE spent most of his childhood in a Surrey children's home. He returned to Brixton in 1977 where he founded the Crucial Rocker sound system and performed his own songs and lyrics under the name of Yardman Irie. He spent a short stint in prison following the Brixton uprising of 1981. Following his release from prison he continued to write poems and lyrics and became known as the Brixton Bard. Alex's first novel, BRIXTON ROCK, was published to critical acclaim in 1999. Five more novels, EAST OF ACRE LANE, THE SEVEN SISTERS, ISLAND SONGS, CHECKERS and THE DIRTY SOUTH followed, all highly praised. His books are on school reading lists, Alex takes part in Black History Month every year, works with Streatham Youth Community Trust, helping to run a homework club. He is representing English PEN, and tours the country with his one-man show, UPRISING. He teaches in various places including Lambeth College, holds workshops in prisons and is frequently invited to schools to speak to students, inspiring in them with his own story a passion for literature. Alex also appears regularly on BBC1's The One Show and on radio. In the autumn of 2010 he wrote and performed his own one-man autobiographical show for Tara Arts, UPRISING, and took the performance on tour in October 2012. He was at Harrogate Crime Writing Festival in July 2011. He was awarded an MBE in the Queen's Birthday Honours list for services to literature in 2008. A favourite of reading groups and libraries, he is UK's most read Black British author. He is working on a non-fiction book about Black Britain and on more Young Adult novels. He lives with his family in South London.

General Fields

  • : 9780349002323
  • : Little, Brown Book Group
  • : ATOM
  • : 0.22
  • : 01 February 2016
  • : 198mm X 126mm
  • : United Kingdom
  • : 01 March 2016
  • : books

Special Fields

  • : Alex Wheatle
  • : Paperback
  • : 1
  • : en
  • : 823.92
  • : 304
  • : YFB