Junk (novel)

Junk, known as Smack in the U.S., is a realistic novel for young adults by the British author Melvin Burgess, published in 1996 by Andersen in the U.K. Set on the streets of Bristol, England, it features two runaway teens who join a group of squatters, where they fall into heroin addiction and embrace anarchism. Both critically and commercially it is the best received of Burgess' novels. Yet it was unusually controversial at first, criticized negatively for its "how-to" aspect, or its dark realism, or its moral relativism.

Burgess won the annual Carnegie Medal from the Library Association, recognising the year's outstanding children's book by a British author. For the 70th anniversary of the Medal in 2007 Junk was named one of the top ten winning works, selected by a panel to compose the ballot for a public election of the all-time favourite.Junk also won the Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, a similar award that authors may not win twice. It is the latest of six books to win both awards.

Junk

Junk may refer to:

  • Junk, melon of the sperm whale
  • Scrap, recyclable waste used to build and maintain things
  • Junk: Record of the Last Hero, shōnen manga series by Kia Asamiya
  • Junk, salt-cured meat
  • Junk (ship), type of Chinese sailing vessel
  • Junk status, debt credit rating
  • Junk (Transformers), fictional planet in the Transformers universe
  • Junk in the trunk, slang term for a person with a large buttocks
  • J-U-N-K (1920), American film produced by Morris R. Schlank
  • Junk (film), Japanese Yakuza zombie film directed by Atsushi Muroga
  • Junk (novel), by Melvin Burgess
  • Junk, novel by Christopher Largen
  • Music

  • Junk (band), British pop band
  • "Junk" (song), written by Paul McCartney
  • "Junk", song from Zico Chain's Food album
  • People named Junk

  • Bruno Junk, Estonian athlete, 2-time olympic bronze medal winner
  • Wilhelm Junk, Czech-born bookseller and entomologist
  • See also

  • Junker (disambiguation)
  • Junkie (disambiguation)
  • Junk mail (disambiguation)
  • Junk (song)

    "Junk" is a song written by Paul McCartney in 1968 while the Beatles were in India. "Singalong Junk" is an instrumental version of "Junk" that also appears on McCartney.

    History

    It was originally under consideration for The Beatles (also known as the White Album). It was passed over for that LP, as it was for Abbey Road. It was eventually released on McCartney's debut solo album McCartney in 1970. The version McCartney played for the rest of the Beatles, in May 1968, was among other songs demoed at George Harrison's Kinfauns home before the recording of The Beatles, and was released on Anthology 3 on 22 October 1996. The song's working title was "Jubilee", and also known as "Junk in the Yard". Take one appeared on the McCartney album as "Singalong Junk" and whereas take two was issued as "Junk".

    Besides the exclusion of vocals, "Singalong Junk" features mellotron strings and the melody is played on a piano. The song also features more prominent drums. This version of the song is said to have been the original instrumental backing to which McCartney was planning on singing, but he opted for a simpler arrangement for the vocal version instead.

    Melon (cetacean)

    The melon is a mass of adipose tissue found in the forehead of all toothed whales. It focuses and modulates the animal's vocalizations and acts as a sound lens. It is thus a key organ involved in communication and echolocation.

    Description

    The melon is structurally part of the nasal apparatus (the nose) and comprises most of the mass tissue between the blowhole and the tip of the snout. The function of the melon is not completely understood, but scientists believe it is a bioacoustic component, providing a means of focusing sounds used in echolocation and impedance matching. Impedance matching refers to the melon's function in creating a similarity between characteristics of its tissue and the surrounding water so that acoustic energy can flow out of the head and into the environment with the least loss of energy. In the past, some scientists believed that the melon had functions in deep diving and buoyancy, but these ideas have been discounted over the last 40 years and are no longer considered valid by cetologists.

    Moon of Israel (novel)

    Moon of Israel is a novel by Rider Haggard, first published in 1918 by John Murray. The novel narrates the events of the Biblical Exodus from Egypt told from the perspective of a scribe named Ana.

    Haggard dedicated his novel to Sir Gaston Maspero, a distinguished Egyptologist and director of Cairo Museum.

    Adaptation

    His novel was the basis of a script by Ladislaus Vajda, for film-director Michael Curtiz in his 1924 Austrian epic known as Die Sklavenkönigin, or "Queen of the Slaves".

    References

    External links

  • Moon of Israel at Project Gutenberg

  • Novel (disambiguation)

    A novel is a long prose narrative.

    Novel may also refer to:

  • Novel (album), an album by Joey Pearson
  • Novel (film), a 2008 Malayalam film
  • Novel (musician) (born 1981), American hip-hop artist
  • The Novel, a 1991 novel by James A. Michener
  • Novel, Haute-Savoie, a commune in eastern France
  • Novels (Roman law), a term for a new Roman law in the Byzantine era
  • Novel, Inc., a video game studio and enterprise simulation developer
  • Novellae Constitutiones or The Novels, laws passed by Byzantine Emperor Justinian I
  • Novel: A Forum on Fiction, an academic journal
  • Novel, a minor musical side project of Adam Young
  • See also

  • Novell, a software company
  • Novella (disambiguation)
  • Robert Conroy

    Joseph Robert Conroy (August 24, 1938 – December 30, 2014) was an author of alternate history novels. He lived in suburban Detroit and was a semiretired business and economics history teacher. He died of cancer.

    Bibliography

  • 1901, (1995) ISBN 978-0891418436, his first novel, deals with an Imperial German invasion of Long Island when William McKinley is President.
  • 1862, (2006) ISBN 978-0345482372, is based on what might have happened had the United Kingdom entered into the American Civil War on the side of the Confederacy.
  • 1945, (2007) ISBN 978-0345494795, a scenario in which the Empire of Japan refuses to surrender following the Atomic bombings of Hiroshima and Nagasaki, forcing the United States to launch Operation Downfall.
  • 1942, (2009) ISBN 978-0345506078, which won the Sidewise Award for Alternate History, tells of the Japanese conquest of Hawaii after the attack on Pearl Harbor is far more successful than actually happened.
  • Red Inferno: 1945, (2010) ISBN 978-0345506061, deals with a war between the Western Allies and the Soviet Union following the controversial move by the Allies towards Berlin. The move is tragically misunderstood by Joseph Stalin, who becomes determined to seize all Europe, resulting in a Third World War.
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    The Leopard and the ruins of history

    New Statesman 07 Mar 2025
    you sit down and read a novel; better still, you write one ... It would become the greatest novel in modern Italian literature, guiding generations through the bewildering caprices of history ... Yes, there’s the novel’s pessimism about class struggle.
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