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Someone Like Me

          By Elaine Forrestal
Published by: Penguin Books (Australia) Ltd, Penguin Books (UK) Ltd, Mondadori Editori, Italy

Before reading the book

1. First read the blurb on the back cover of Someone Like Me. What sort of story is this going to be?

1. Now read the blurb on this page. What sort of story is this going to be?
 
 
 


 
 
  

You're a snooper. Snoopers are trouble. Where I come from they don't survive'.
 

Tas's uneventual life is changed for ever when Enya and her family move into the farm next door. They have come to Australia to escape the violence of their home in Northern Ireland, but when the past catches up with them, Tas is trapped in the middle.


OR: Go to the bottom of this page and find the picture of a boy swinging on a rope. 
Compare the two boys on this page with the one on the cover of Someone Like Me. 
Write a few comments about each one: 
a) What sort of kid is he? 
b) Would you like to be him? 
c) Would you choose him as your friend? 
 

Someone Like Me is published in Australia, the United Kingdom and Italy. Each edition has a different cover illustration and different blurbs.

Why do you think this is?

WARNING: Read the book now! 

If the ending of Someone Like Me is revealed to you before you read the book, it will change the way you view the characters.

Analysis and application of knowledge 

Read and discuss the novel. Throughout the text there are lots of clues to the surprise ending. 

Can you find them? 

eg. P11 That was the good news.
       P14 She's scared of the dark. But I'm not. etc.

1. Using the new information revealed at the end of the
book, write a follow-on chapter.

Music is very important in Tas's life. Not only does he have his own CD player, he is familiar with his father's CD collection. 

4. Make a list of: 
a) the songs he plays on the mouth organ that Granny Anne gives him
b) his favourite classical CDs
c) the instruments he plays during the course of this story.

 There is a turning point in this novel when the orchestra comes to Tas's school. How does this incident change Tas's life? What effect does it have on 
a) the other kids in the school?
b) his family?
c) his future?

5. Turn this Chapter of the book into a play. You could produce it in two acts. The first using the Prokofiev version of Peter and the Wolf with actors playing the parts of the characters in the folktale. In the second act, you could use other class members for the musicians, the kids and Mr Mac. Or, you could divide it into two separate plays. 

6. Make a list of the things you can do now that you couldn't do when you were younger. Describe how you felt the first time you achieved one of those things.

Extension  activities

Develop a band or a pop group using the kids in the class who already play instruments.

Invite a local group or orchestra to come and perform at your school.

Go on an excursion to hear an orchestra or band play.
Choose three things that you read about in Someone LikeMe that you would like to know more about.

 Someone Like Me: the musical

This can be performed as reader's theatre or adapted for the stage as a full scale, end-of-year musical with all the characters committing their lines to memory. As a school drama production it has the advantages of providing parts for a whole class full of kids and being very economical to produce as most of the costumes and props will already be in the school.

NB. The pieces of music used in the original story can, of course, be changed to suit the group performing the play. You will notice that the scenes do not necessarily appear in the same order as in the book and some elements of the original story have been omitted. 

Act 1
Scene 1: (In which Grella visits and gives Tas his grandfather's mouth organ.)
   Tas's house
      Bottom of p14 (last paragraph, Puffin edition) to
      End of Chapter 2 on p17.

Scene 2: (In which we meet Mr Mac, Dreadlock, Enya and the rest of the class)
   Classroom
      Beginning of Chapter 3, to
      End of second last paragraph on p21.

Scene 3: (In which Tas and Enya get to know each other while listening to Beethoven's 5th Symphony)
   Tas's house
      Second paragraph, p22, to
      Bottom of p24.

Scene 4: (In which Enya tells Tas she is not allowed to visit his house anymore)
   On the school bus
      P69 (after the break) to
      End of Chapter 8.

Act 2
Scene 1: (In which Tas fights with Dreadlock and his gang)
   Schoolyard
       Middle of p39 ('When I get to school…') to
       Middle of p43 then
       P120, second last paragraph, to
       P121 ('Dreadlock head-butts me in the chest…') then
       P47, beginning of Chapter 6 to
       Middle of p48 ('Their lives weren't worth living...')

Scene 2: (In which we meet Tas's parents and Tas runs away, feeling rejected by everyone)
   Principal's Office
       Middle of p48 to
       Middle of p50 (second part of this scene could take part outside the office)

Scene 3: (Tas, feeling miserable, teaches himself to play Four Strong Winds and/or Danny Boy)
   Tas's hideout
      P81, beginning of Chapter 10 to
      Top of P83

Act 3
Scene 1: (In which Tas discovers that he is not completely useless and can do something that none of the other kids can do)
    School Assembly Area
        Whole of Chapter 17. (Peter and the Wolf)

Scene 2: (In which Enya explains why her family left Ireland and why her father doesn't want anyone to get too close to them.)
   On the school bus
     The dialogue in this scene will have to be changed to leave out any 
mention of the shooting, but keep the sense of reconciliation between
Tas and Enya. Bottom of p124, to end of Chapter 16.

Scene 3: (In which Tas auditions for a music scholarship)
   The city school 
      Beginning of Chapter 19 to
      Bottom of p147 ('… warm, comfortable feeling')

Scene 4: (In which, at an end-of-year party at the school, Mr Mac announces that Tas had won a music scholarship. Everyone congratulates Tas – even Dreadlock, though a bit hesitantly. The scene ends with the others all leaving and Tas standing alone on the stage, looking to the future.)

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This format can, of course, be varied to suit individual needs. 

Normal copyrght does apply if more than 10% of the original publication is photocopied. Permission should be sought from the publisher, Penguin Books Australia Ltd, if admission is to be charged for any performance.