My Name Is… by Alastair Campbell
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Blurb: A drink makes me feel better. For a bit. And then I feel worse, and the pain inside comes back. Worse than ever.
My name is Hannah. This is their story…
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Leyla Sanai, The Independent
“Personal accounts are convincing and gradual changes of jobs/pupil demographics over time add authenticity. A picture emerges of a vulnerable girl growing up in a desperately unhappy home, with genes for addictive behaviour rife in her background, feeling protective about her sister, rejected by her beleaguered mother, and abandoned by her one strength, swimming, because state school kids don’t receive support. The tenacity Campbell brought to bear in politics is matched here by his gripping inhabitation of his characters. Stunning.”
Ben East, The Observer
“On the whole Campbell succeeds in allowing Hannah’s family, friends and, later, psychiatrists and magistrates, to tell her story. Which is just as well, because though such an approach is to be applauded, it does accentuate Campbell’s limitations as a novelist. The characters are never really distinct enough both in language and well-meaning intention: everyone just wants Hannah to stop drinking.”
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