Trash

Trash

3.71 of 5 stars 3.71  ·  rating details  ·  2,501 ratings  ·  571 reviews
In an unnamed Third World country, in the not-so-distant future, three “dumpsite boys” make a living picking through the mountains of garbage on the outskirts of a large city.

One unlucky-lucky day, Raphael finds something very special and very mysterious. So mysterious that he decides to keep it, even when the city police offer a handsome reward for its return. That decis...more
ebook, 240 pages
Published October 12th 2010 by David Fickling Books (first published January 1st 2010)

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K.D. Oliveros
Nov 16, 2010 K.D. Oliveros rated it 2 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to K.D. by: Tina
Shelves: local, ya
Trash by Andrew "Andy" Mulligan, a British theatre director, drama teacher and now novelist is set most likely in the Philippines. Why? He used the places that are familiar to us Filipinos: Smoky Mountain (for us it is spelled with an "e" as in Smokey), Green Hills (Greenhills is a shopping center in San Juan where the former president/vice-president/senator, Joseph Estrada lives), McKinley Hill and the currency is in pesos and the country celebrates All Soul's Day on November 2nd when people fl...more
Clare Cannon
May 25, 2011 Clare Cannon rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: 13 years - adults

What an amazing book! Three dumpsite boys live by sifting rubbish and looking for things to sell. One day they discover a deadly secret which they must decipher and try to fathom, and which they must risk their lives to keep hidden from the police.

Mulligan's writing is crystal clear: each voice is unique, telling the story as it happens from a different of point of view, which gives credibility and depth and sets an incredible pace.

It is a confronting tale of the corruption of power and the imp...more
Linda Lipko
This book took my breath away for the sheer beauty of the writing and the depth in which the author told a tale of poverty and the stark disparity of those who have and those who are without even basic needs.

It is a story of political graft and corruption that occurs systemically on all levels of the hierarchy. It is a story of brave young boys who pay a high price for a dream of a better existence.

With no hope of a better life, a large population of poor pick and sort garbage. Living and workin...more
Aly (Fantasy4eva)

Reading experience is more of a 3.5. The book though, is a 3. (if that makes sense).


description

i happen to have this cover. as i'm reading along, it seems more and more tragically beautiful to me. by far my favourite cover of the book. [Update] I now see that my cover features Garbo (I'm assuming since he's bald). But the cover the review features also really connects with me now. After reading this book, it will hold so much meaning. This is why I love covers that are actually relevant to the book.


There i...more
Monique

Far from diverting attention from the Philippines, the seemingly insignificant details that Andy Mulligan utilized in Trash even serve to reinforce the idea that the story was actually set in our very own Manila, particularly in that hectares-big dumpsite called Payatas. (Smoky Mountain, the old dumpsite in Tondo, has since been closed and abandoned. In the book, Payatas was renamed Behala.) Aside from familiar places in the metro and the very Filipino names, most telling, in my opinion, is t...more
Lynai
Wonderful. This book is just wonderful. Despite the connotation of the word, Trash is far from being, well, trash. It’s more of a gem actually, if I may say. So what made me want to read this book? Curiosity. Who wouldn’t be curious about a novel that is about his own country? With these, I’ll tell you in three parts the reasons why I like this book : the setting, the characters, the plot.

The setting

Although there is no mention about it in the book, Trash is most probably set in the Philippines....more
Kirsty (overflowing library)
This book was totally different from anything else I have read so far this year. It hit on a variety of topics which made me think and was generally a nice read.

The story was told from the point of view of three boys (along with ocassional commentary from other secondary characters) who live and work in trash, namely the city landfill site. They make their living from wading through the rubbish thrown out by the people in the city they live in. The first thing that really struck home for me whil...more
Sarah
Raphael and his friends have grown up in a slum town built amidst a rubbish dump, spending their days sorting through rubbish for anything that they can sell to get money for food. They have all dreamed of finding something valuable but when Raphael finds a bag containing money, a key and a letter life nothing will ever be the same again. With corrupt policemen looking for the bag they are now in great danger - it is very easy for street kids to disappear and there is no one who can stop it happ...more
Isamlq
All I can say is Andy Mulligan pulls no punches in TRASH. People do live this way; people do really do these things. The squalor that he describes, the corruption that he explains, the harsh treatment meted out by authorities. All these things are fact for a good number of people here. And yet, the positives like the kindness of strangers, the charity of others, the connectedness of family, were not discounted.

So the message? While there is a lot of trash, there’s also a lot to be thankful for....more
Krista
This review has been hidden because it contains spoilers. To view it, click here.
Encruzilhadas Literárias
Quem nos segue habitualmente é capaz de já ter notado que temos uma tag especial para a colecção Noites Claras da Editorial Presença. Criámo-la quando descobrimos que já tínhamos lido muitos dos livros desta colecção e mais, quando nos apercebemos o quanto gostamos deles e o quanto eles nos mantêm a pé a noite toda fazendo jus ao nome da colecção!
Trash é um livro diferente do que esperava inicialmente: a narrativa é contada principalmente na primeira pessoa pelos três rapazes que trabalham na L...more
Carolyn
In an unspecified third world country, three boys make a meager living combing through a city’s mountainous dumpsite. Everything changes when they discover the first clue in a riddle that will involve a greedy politician, corrupt police officers, and a criminal cover-up. The grim setting may appeal to fans of dystopian novels like Ship Breaker, though the modern-day world of the story is sadly all too believable. Less believable is the characters’ motivation, specifically why they risk everythin...more
Elijah Strong
Mar 29, 2013 Elijah Strong rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: no one




Elijah Strong 3/29/13

For my 3rd good reads assignment I read the book trash. Also the Author illustrated the stories different settings in a descriptave way. The author did a great job showing the personalities of the main characters of the book. Trash was an ok novel, but for a book with a little more than 200 pages, some of the settings in the book became long.

The novel is centered on a boy named Raphael, who finds a bag of pesos while digging through the landfill. He and his friend Gardo keep...more
Leane Charlotte
Mar 02, 2013 Leane Charlotte rated it 3 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition Recommends it for: 10-11 year olds
Recommended to Leane by: Scholastic
Rating: 3.5

In a nutshell, Trash by Andy Mulligan is a good book. The story revolves around these three dumpsite boys, Raphael, Gardo and Rat. I think it's supposed to be set as a dystopian not-so-distant future, but I kind of felt that it was actually set in the present in Mexico. One day, Raphael and Gardo find this bag with a wallet and a letter in it. They seek the help of one of their friends, Jun-Jun, known as Rat, and set off on a "treasure-hunt" sort of thing.

The story is slightly confusi...more
Harun Harahap
Raphael, Gardo, Jun 'Tikus" Jun. Tiga anak kecil yang berprofesi sebagai pemulung. Hidup mereka berubah menjadi petualangan yang berbahaya. Semuanya dimulai ketika mereka menemukan sebuah tas di antara tumpukan sampah. Ternyata, tas itu menjadi penghubung dengan uang jutaan dollar curian seseorang. Yang dicuri dari seorang pejabat. Dimana uang pejabat itu juga didapat dari mencuri uang rakyat.

Di awal, gue bersedih dengan apa yang dialami para pemulung cilik ini. Kesehariannya harus bergumul deng...more
Christina
Interesting story of two friends in an unnamed but clearly South American country who make their meager living as trash pickers on a huge dumpsite. One of them finds a valuable item, a wallet with money, a key, and the ID of a man they learn died in police custody. After pocketing the cash, the boys aren't sure what to do with the wallet, until the police arrive and ask all the trash pickers if they've found anything special--and offer a reward to whoever can find it in the vast smelly constantl...more
Karen
Trash is a fast-paced adventure story as well as a fascinating glimpse into the world of extreme poverty and child labor in third-world countries. The plot revolves around 3 "dumpsite" boys who unexpectedly find something very valuable mixed in with all the trash they sort through daily. The boys embark on a quest to solve the mystery behind what they've found, and must ultimately decide how to deal with the information they uncover.

I found the 3 main characters very likeable and endearing, and...more
Everyday eBook
Nov 12, 2012 Everyday eBook rated it 5 of 5 stars  ·  review of another edition
Recommended to Everyday by: Sarah Cahill
When you live a comfortable life and have all your basic needs taken care of, it's easy to forget that much of the world is not nearly as lucky. I'm a firm believer that it's important to expose ourselves to the plight of the less fortunate as a reminder of how lucky we are by comparison. This personal philosophy (coupled with a true adoration of Young Adult literature) is what initially attracted me to Andy Mulligan's marvelous novel, Trash.

Set in an unnamed Third World country in the near futu...more
Ms Tlaskal
This is a really worthy novel in that it transports first world kids smack bang into the third world. And not in th etouristy part of the thirdworld but into its garbage tips where swarms of children are human recyclers armed with hooks ceaselessly clawing through the waste of those classes above them in search of what to sell for their livelihood. I'm sure the true details of life as a rubbish dump kid are sanitised but enough leaks through like the dangers of being crushed under vast piles of...more
cait
This is a horribly realistic story, written with depth and emotion -- and filled with surprises.

Even though it's only based off Manila, the Philippines, the book rings of a true-to-life story. You get caught up in the crushing poverty of dump kids, in their way of life, in their personal stories. Drama, fear, trouble, mystery, police, unforgettable characters, beatings, rubbish -- it's all there. It's a story of a different perspective. It's a story of fighting for what you think is right.

Thou...more
Erin Mccall
Fourteen-year-old Raphael Fernandez lives in a community of filth. His parents are dead. He keeps his aunt and little cousins from going hungry by sorting through the new steaming piles of trash that are trucked in daily, looking for plastics and reusable items to sell for pesos. He doesn’t go to school and he doesn’t wear shoes. Every day working the trash piles is the same, separating the ‘stuppa’ from the plastics, and maybe even finding a shirt… until a small black leather bag appears among...more
Raissa
This book is a quick read that describes the lives of scavengers and street people in the Philippines fairly well. Since I'm a Filipino and familiar with the places and kinds of people described, I couldn't help noticing some unlikely details. Like when he describes kids wearing ties while in the cemetery for All Saints' Day (not All Souls' although that's the real day of the dead; here we start cemetery visits on All Saints, November 1). I'm glad he switched to calling it Day of the Dead becaus...more
Earl
There aren’t many books today that can touch on the hardships of a 3rd world country and still be enjoyable. Luckily Andy Mulligan has found that comfortable balance with his book called Trash. Trash is based around two young boys named Raphael, Gardo and Rat who live in a run-down third world country garbage dump close by outskirts of a foreign city (believed to be in the Philippians). One day while digging through trash Raphael finds a large sum of cash, a missing I.D., key and a map. While th...more
Rebecca
Trash starts out very hard to understand. It switches back and forth between the three boys without letting you know, so it was easy to get confused as to who was speaking at the time. You had to reread sometimes in order to understand for sure who just said what. One of the things that I didn’t like was that the location of the boys was never given. You understood that they lived in a poor, third-world country, but were not given a specific place until after finishing the book. Although the boo...more
Lantz Kehlmier
Trash by Any Mulligan is a novel about three “dumpster boys” who live among the trash and find an important wallet that takes them on a roller-coaster ride of adventure. Right away, Mulligan strikes at the reader’s emotions as it opens with two of the main characters, Raphael and Gardo combing through the trash. I immediately felt sad and began to wonder what life would be like to live that way. Almost immediately the mood changes to that of curiosity and adventure when Raphael found the wallet...more
Jenny Lu
Trash by Andy Mulligan is a book that is thought-provoking and conversation-inciting. When introduced to the three kids of this book—Raphael, Gardo, and Rat—readers quickly fall in love with the characters and their will-power to fight for their vision for what is right. They don’t stop in the face of hardship or danger, and will do anything to keep the police from unraveling the mystery before they do.
I like how this story is told in first-person point of view throughout the book. It provides f...more
Allison Reed
Andy Mulligan’s Trash succeeds in telling an intelligent story of mystery for children though it does have its drawbacks.

Mulligan’s characters, 3 young boys named Raphael, Gardo, and Jun-Jun or Rat, do not seem to have a different voice as they trade the responsibility of writing the chapters of this story. I, personally, found myself having to constantly look back to see who was speaking at the time; often I found I did not even care enough to look back, as it often did not matter who was tel...more
Caren
Shortlisted for the 2012 Carnegie Medal, this work of fiction reminded me a bit of the recent adult nonfiction book "Behind the Beautiful Forevers" by Katherine Boo. The author isn't specific about where the boys in this novel live, although in his acknowledgements at the end, he says it is loosely based on places he saw while living in Manila. It is a reminder that many children in this world live in situations hard for us in the West to fathom. The book is a great adventure story and should ap...more
Melissa
Trash, by Andy Mulligan is book that takes a look into the lives of children who spend their daily life sorting through the trash in a third-world country’s dump. After they find a bag that the police are looking for, their lives’ take a drastic turn from daily dump life to solving the mystery of what the contents of this bag mean.
This 230-page long chapter book is divided into 5 parts. Throughout the book, different characters are narrating the story, altering the point of view. We hear the st...more
Alexandra Day
The young adult novel Trash by Andy Mulligan is by no means a work of junk, like it’s title suggests. Trash is a hidden treasure that depicts a gruesome and devastating reality for boys living in, you guessed it, trash. While the story wasn’t exquisitely written, its simple style did the book justice. The boys were real characters and the reader felt for them. However as the story progressed, they became deceiving through the tasks they did, which some readers may not appreciate. One aspect tha...more
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Andy Mulligan was brought up in the south of London. He worked as a theatre director for ten years before travels in Asia prompted him to retrain as a teacher. He has taught English and drama in India, Brazil, the Philippines and the UK. He now divides his time between London and Manila.
More about Andy Mulligan...
Ribblestrop (Ribblestrop, #1) Return to Ribblestrop (Ribblestrop, #2) Ribblestrop Forever (Ribblestrop, #3) The Boy With Two Heads

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“With the right key you can bust the door wide open. Because nobody's going to open it for you.” 14 people liked it
“I think I must have got an eye - and I'll be honest, I hope so: I hope he's a one-eyed prison guard now and telling his tale about how he tried to sell a little boy after a deal was made and that boy turned round and took his eye out - I hope his whole cheating face is cut right through, my gift to a filthy traitor.” 4 people liked it
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