Book description
Maria Tambini is a 13-year-old girl with an amazing singing voice.
Growing up above her mother's chip shop on the Scottish island of
Bute, living at the centre of her family's dream of fame, Maria is an
extraordinary girl making ready to escape the ordinary life. We first
meet her amidst the faded grandeur of the seaside resort of Rothesay,
with the Argyll hills and the Eighties in front of her, and behind her
a long shadow: the secret story of her Italian-immigrant family. When
Maria wins a national TV talent show she is taken to London and
becomes an instant star of what used to be called light entertainment;
she sings with Dean Martin and tours America, can fill the London
Palladium, yet all the while 'the girl with the giant voice' is losing
herself in fame and begins a private war against her own body. Maria
becomes a living exhibit in the modern drama of celebrity: is it
possible that she can be saved by love? Or is she to be consumed by an
obsessive culture, by family lies and her number one fan? The cast of
characters is so vivid and complex that they seem to encompass within
their enthralling stories a portrait of a whole society, its history
and its spirit.
Andrew O'Hagan was born in Glasgow in 1968. His first book, The
Missing, was published in 1995 and shortlisted for the
Esquire/Waterstone's/Apple Non-Fiction Award. Our Fathers, his debut
novel, was shortlisted for the 1999 Booker Prize. His second novel,
Personality, was published in 2003 and won the James Tait Black Memorial
Prize for Fiction. In January of that year Granta named him one of the
'Best of Young British Novelists' and in April he received the E. M.
Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts & Letters. He lives
in London.