Browse by category
Boys Don't Cry by Malorie Blackman
$10.00 NZD
Category: Fiction | Reading Level: very good
You're about to receive your A-level results and then a future of university and journalism awaits. But the day they're due to arrive your old girlfriend Kendra turns up unexpectedly ...with a baby ...You assume Kendra's helping a friend, until she nips out to buy some essentials, leaving you literally ...Show more
Checkmate (#3) by Malorie Blackman
$7.00 NZD
Category: Fiction | Series: Noughts & Crosses | Reading Level: very good
Can the future ever erase the past? Rose has a Cross mother and a nought father in a society where the pale-skinned noughts are treated as inferiors and those with dual heritage face a life-long battle against deep-rooted prejudices. Sephy, her mother, has told Rose virtually nothing about her father, b ...Show more
Double Cross by Malorie Blackman
$8.00 NZD
Category: Fiction | Reading Level: very good
A bomb blast in a hotel has killed Callie Rose's grandmother - and everyone assumes a nought terrorist was to blame. But Callie Rose knows the truth - and her fear of the pastleaves her afraid for her future.And she is right to be afraid. For her boyfriend Tobey - offered the chance to make some ready m ...Show more
Knife Edge (#2) by Malorie Blackman
$7.00 NZD
Category: Fiction | Series: Noughts & Crosses | Reading Level: very good
Sephy is a Cross, one of the privileged in a society where the ruling Crosses treat the pale-skinned noughts as inferiors. But her baby daughter has a nought father-Jude is a nought. Eaten up with bitterness, he blames Sephy for the terrible losses his family has suffered-Now Jude's life rests on a knif ...Show more
Noughts & Crosses (#1) by Malorie Blackman
$7.00 NZD
Category: Fiction | Series: Noughts & Crosses | Reading Level: very good
Two young people are forced to make a stand in this thought-provoking look at racism and prejudice in an alternate society.Sephy is a Cross -- a member of the dark-skinned ruling class. Callum is a Nought -- a “colourless” member of the underclass who were once slaves to the Crosses. The two have been f ...Show more
0 - 4 of 5