Heaven Eyes book cover

Heaven Eyes

Erin, January and Mouse live in a children’s home, Whitegates. They often dream of escape, and frequently journey into the outside world. Running away is something they know all about. But this time January builds a raft, and the three of them head precariously down river. Towards the Black Middens. This time they might never come back. When they stumble across a disused factory and its strange inhabitants – Grampa and Heaven Eyes – they wonder if they’ll even have the choice. Heaven Eyes is the girl who should have drowned at sea. The mysterious girl desperately searching for her family, hoping that these three might be the family she has lost. She has a secret history only Grampa knows. And does he trust these three invaders enough to tell them? Erin feels a sisterly responsibility for Heaven Eyes, Mouse longs to belong anywhere and anyhow, but January thinks Grampa’s a murderer. Whatever happens, all three have a part to play. . .

A stunning novel from the author of the modern children’s classic Skellig – winner of the Carnegie Medal and the Whitbread Children’s Book Award. David Almond is also winner of the 2010 Hans Christian Andersen award.

Heaven Eyes book cover

Age range: 6-11

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Publication date: 05/12/13

Publisher: Hachette Children's Group

Reviews for Heaven Eyes

Strange and beautiful. 

The Mail on Sunday

A remarkable novel about love and the heroic refusal to give in to sadness.

The Scotsman

Another beautiful book by David Almond for teenagers with yearning hearts. Surprsing, perfect and mysterious all at once. 

The Times

David Almond understands the joy and fear of being alive better than most – Heaven Eyes is a mysterious gift of a novel. 

The Times

Almond’s eerie tale is an astonishing piece of writing about the way that the living and the dead find comfort in each other . . . A very grown-up, totally compelling book, that, like Almond’s brilliant Skellig, is about the lost and found, abandonment and redemption, love and faith – particularly faith in yourself and others.

The Guardian