Author:Kevin Brooks

An electrifying novel from the Carnegie medal-winning Kevin Brooks. Now a Netflix movie starring Maisie Williams (Game of Thrones).
Before the attack, sixteen-year-old Tom Harvey was just an ordinary boy.
But now fragments of a shattered iPhone are embedded in his brain and it's having an extraordinary effect...
Because now Tom has powers. The ability to know and see more than he could ever imagine. And with incredible power comes knowledge - and a choice. Seek revenge on the violent gangs that rule his estate and assaulted his friend Lucy, or keep quiet?
Tom has control when everything else is out of control. But it's a dangerous price to pay. And the consequences are terrifying. . .
'A compulsive, atmospheric mystery' Sunday Times
'A masterly writer, and this book would put many authors of 'grown up' detective fiction to shame' Mail on Sunday
Kevin Brooks is the award-winning author of nine gripping teenage novels, usually with a thrilling detective twist. His novels, Being, Black Rabbit Summer, Killing God (published as Dawn in the USA) and Naked are also available from Penguin. Kevin's brand new novel, The Bunker Diary, will be published in 2013. If you enjoyed iBoy and want to get inside more of your favourite books, then check out spinebreakers.co.uk for exclusive author interviews, competitions, and much more.
[Kevin Brooks'] pacey plots, masterly style and philosophical ideas in novels such as Martyn Pig, Killing God and Black Rabbit Summer have made him a cult among teens. This, though, is the big one. Its power as literature draws on a reality that few adult novelists have the stomach to address. It should be read by everyone.
—— Amanda Craig , The TimesChildren's Book of the Month: Gripping, streetwise and profound.
—— Geraldine Brennan , The ObserveriBoy is a hugely readable revenge fantasy....confoundedly gripping.
—— Nick Tucker , Independent on SundayA well-paced narrative with carefully crafted twists...intensely visual descriptions... Inventive in its form and often profound in its poetry, Symmons Roberts' gripping story is a meditation on the difficulty of forgiveness in wartime
—— Sunday TelegraphSymmons Roberts is already a poet of note, and this...is discernibly a poet's book. Short and introspective, it stays in the mind and echoes
—— The TimesMagically spun out. An entrancing yet disturbing book
—— Sunday ExpressAn absorbing fable of the here-and-now
—— IndependentA call to embrace life
—— Easy LivingPraise for Liane Moriarty
—— -Every single one of her books is a great read
—— E! OnlineStaggeringly brilliant, literally unputdownable
—— Sophie HannahKeeps you guessing until the very end - perfect summer read
—— Reese WitherspoonMoriarty writes vividly, wittily and wickedly
—— Sunday ExpressThe writing is beautiful: sometimes funny, sometimes sad but always compelling
—— Good HousekeepingLike drinking a pink cosmo laced with arsenic . . . a fun, engaging and sometimes disturbing read
—— USA TodayRiveting drama packed with suspense and secrets
—— Woman & HomeWise, honest, beautifully observed. One of the few writers I'll drop anything for
—— Jojo MoyesStraight-from-life characters, knife-sharp insight and almost unbearable suspense will have you racing through it
—— Good HousekeepingPerfect
—— Hello!A hell of a good book. Funny and scary
—— Stephen KingA cracking story cleverly told
—— FabulousFascinating and compassionate
—— Daily Telegraph






