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Paradise Lodge

By: Nina Stibbe
Narrated by: Helen Baxendale
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Publisher's summary

This is the story of Lizzie Vogel, a 15 year old girl who finds herself working in a ramshackle old people's home in the English suburbs. It is the late 1970s and the place is in chaos - there's a much swisher old people's home nearer the supermarket with better parking which is taking all the best patients; Matron seems to be utterly without qualifications, and Lizzie has no idea what she's doing.

But, the longer Lizzie stays the more she discovers about the patients and the staff - she uncovers a love affair and a plot to kidnap one of the patients, as well as discovering how not to wash false teeth or give an old lady a bath. Very funny, tender and wonderfully gripping, Paradise Lodge is a celebration of chaos, love and old people.

©2016 Nina Stibbe (P)2016 Penguin Audio
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Just strange

As a sequel to the poignant and whimsical Man at the Helm, this is an odd duck indeed. There are lovely moments of seventies nostalgia, but in general, the cast of characters is not terribly engaging, Matron apart, and the plot devices a little fanciful.

Baxendale is sadly also not a patch on her predecessor.

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