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Excerpt from My Name Is Leon by Kit De Waal, plus links to reviews, author biography & more

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My Name Is Leon by Kit De Waal

My Name Is Leon

by Kit De Waal
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  • Critics' Consensus (4):
  • First Published:
  • Jul 26, 2016, 320 pages
  • Paperback:
  • Jul 2017, 304 pages
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About this Book

Print Excerpt


Bobby loves Leon. He can't talk and, anyway, he always has a pacifier in his mouth but as soon as Leon walks in the door, Bobby wobbles across the carpet and holds Leon's legs. Then he puts out his arms for Leon to pick him up. When Leon's brother is older they're going to play together, soldiers and Action Man. They're going to both have machine guns and run all over the house shooting at targets. Bobby can watch.

Tina's house always has a window open and smells of baby lotion. Tina looks a bit like a baby herself because she's got a round face with puffy cheeks and round eyes that bulge. She makes her hair different colors all the time but she's never happy with it and Carol keeps telling her to go blond.

Tina always says, "If I had your face, Carol, it wouldn't matter so much," and Leon thinks she's right.

Tina has a leather sofa that is cold and slippery on Leon's legs and a sheepskin rug in front of the gas fire and a massive TV. She doesn't let Leon call her "Tina," like he calls his mom "Carol." He has to call her "Auntie Tina" and he has to call Carol "Mom" because she says children have to have respect. And she doesn't let Leon eat in front of the TV. He has to sit at a wooden table in the kitchen where there isn't much room because she has a big fridge-freezer with ice cream in it. Bobby sits in his high chair smiling at Leon and Tina puts two scoops in Leon's bowl and one for Bobby. Leon's brother will probably only get half a scoop because he'll be the smallest.

Sometimes, Tina's boyfriend comes, but when he sees Leon he always says, "Again?" and Tina says, "I know."

Excerpted from My Name Is Leon by Kit De Waal. Copyright © 2016 by Kit De Waal. Excerpted by permission of Simon & Schuster. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.

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