<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<marc:record xmlns:marc="http://www.loc.gov/MARC21/slim">
   <marc:leader>00000nam a2200000 a 4500</marc:leader>
   <marc:datafield ind1="1" ind2=" " tag="100">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Walsh, Helen</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="4">aut</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="e">Verfasser/-in</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="653">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Englisch</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="653">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Prostitution</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="653">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Drogen</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="0" ind2="0" tag="245">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Brass</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="0" ind2="0" tag="245">
      <marc:subfield code="c">Helen Walsh</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2="1" tag="264">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Edinburgh</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="b">Canongate</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="c">2004</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1="1" ind2=" " tag="520">
      <marc:subfield code="a">Nineteen-year-old Millie O'Reilley is, clever, spiky and adored by men - yet utterly forlorn. Even though she has the devotion of her professor father, Jerry, and the respect of the hard-knocks in South Liverpool, Millie feels a sense of growing alienation. Increasingly disillusioned with her University course and fellow students, she seeks an escape in the underbelly of Liverpool's Cathedral area - home to crackheads, pimps, pushers and, most intriguing to Millie, whores. And when an encounter with a world weary prostitute turns into an after hours odyssey of drink fuelled self-abuse it, ultimately, leads Millie toward questioning who she is and what she wants to get out of life. Shockingly candid, brutally poetic, Helen Walsh has created a portrait of a city and a generation that offers a female perspective on the harsh truth of growing up in today's Britain. Brass is an unsettling but ultimately compassionate account of the possibilities of identity and the desirability of love.</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="020">
      <marc:subfield code="a">9781841954844</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="9">9781841954844</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="020">
      <marc:subfield code="a">1841954845</marc:subfield>
      <marc:subfield code="9">1841954845</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
   <marc:datafield ind1=" " ind2=" " tag="300">
      <marc:subfield code="a">295 S.</marc:subfield>
   </marc:datafield>
</marc:record>
