The Stories Grandma Forgot (and How I Found Them)
- Author Nadine Aisha Jassat
- Narrator Nadine Aisha Jassat
- Publisher Hachette Children's Group
- Run Time 5 hours and 21 minutes
- Format Audio
- Genre Children’s / Teenage fiction and true stories, Children’s / Teenage fiction: Crime and mystery fiction, Children’s / Teenage fiction: Stories in verse, Children’s / Teenage personal and social topics: Diversity and inclusion, Children’s / Teenage personal and social topics: Families and family members, Children’s / Teenage personal and social topics: Mental health.
Titles Purchased
- 1-5
- 6-10
- 11-15
- 16-20
- Over 20
Price p/Title
- €9.95
- €8.95
- €7.95
- €6.95
- €5.95
Listen to a sample
What to expect
Twelve-year-old Nyla's dad died when she was four, or that's what she's been told. So when Grandma Farida insists she saw him in the local supermarket, Nyla wonders if Grandma is simply "time travelling" again - the phrase she uses when Grandma forgets.
But Grandma is Nyla's best friend and when she asks Nyla to find her dad and bring him home, Nyla decides to make a brand new promise to her Grandma: to find him.
As Nyla turns detective and sets out on a journey through her family's past to try and find the truth, she also hopes that uncovering important stories will help her understand who she is, and where she fits in the world ...
A riveting audiobook in verse about the power of memory and story-telling, and an unbreakable bond between a grandmother and granddaughter.
(P) 2023 Hodder & Stoughton Limited
Critics Review
-
Eloquent, affecting verse novel
The Guardian -
A captivating verse novel about family and identity, full of warmth and wisdom
Sophie Anderson in The Daily Express -
Thoughtful and sensitive…a gripping but heart-warming tale
People's Friend Magazine -
A warm, funny and moving verse novel
Irish Independent -
A rich verse novel, with a family mystery to unravel at its core
The Herald Scotland -
I have just finished a new verse novel by Scottish-based poet and debut children’s author Nadine Aisha Jassat. The Stories My Grandma Forgot (and How I Found Them) is not like anything I have read for this age group (9-11-year-olds). I thought it would be an emotional book about dementia, but it’s a very pacy book with a mystery – or two! – happening at the same time. Verse novels are great for young readers, there is a lot of white space on the page and the word count is often shorter than prose books. I read this in two days, it was hard to put down. The verse aspects were visually intriguing and playful.
Maisie Chan in The Guardian
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