Hoopdriver

Adventure
Coming of age

Where are you going, Billy?
I’m going south.
And why, Billy-who’s-going-south?
Because I made a promise.

When he finds out from the BBC that the Prime Minister is also ill, Billy Hoopdriver decides to run away from his working-class home in Liverpool without telling his father. He travels the 200 miles separating him from the little seaside town of Kewstoke on Azzurra (the mountain bike he has painstakingly assembled piece by piece) with the sole aim of reaching his grandfather’s care home as soon as possible, because he made a promise: if anything happens, kid, come straight here, OK?
Hoopdriver is the story of

  • Billy’s journey on his bicycle, the route he chooses along the country paths of England and Wales.
  • The historic and beautiful locations he sees.
  • The people he meets along the way: Jo, the Deliveroo guy who dreams of studying engineering; Annabelle, whose hair he cuts by night, and her brother Emmett, who laughs at swear words; Shackleton, the dog, who will follow him for the rest of his journey; Mr Richmal, who repairs Azzurra and helps him discover the world of nocturnal moths; the three sisters of the waterfall, who live alone in a country house, waiting for their mother.
  • But above all, it’s the story of his thoughts, memories of his grandfather’s stories, all linked to music personalities of the seventies, who he claims to have met and know well: from David Bowie to Keith Richards, Roger Waters of Pink Floyd and Robert Wyatt of Soft Machine.
Publisher: Mondadori
Target: 10+
Year: 2021
Author
Pierdomenico Baccalario

Pierdomenico Baccalario has been writing children’s novels since 1997, when he won the Il Battello a Vapore literary prize with La strada del Guerriero (The Way of the Warrior) using his neighbour’s name. Since then, his bestsellers have been written under as many pseudonyms (the best known being Ulysses Moore and Irene Adler), translated into more than thirty languages and published with major Italian and foreign publishers. He has collaborated with Lucca Comics & Games for more than twenty years, has written for Repubblica, and is a columnist for the newspaper Corriere della Sera’s La Lettura literary supplement. In 2014, he founded the Book on a Tree creative agency in London.

 

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