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230p PERSEPHONE BOOKS ISBN 1903155177
AFTERWORD BY ANNE SEBBA
'When I picked up this 1949 reprint I offered it the tenderly
indulgent regard I would any period piece,' wrote Nicholas
Lezard in the Guardian. 'As it turned out, the book
survives perfectly well on its own merits - although it
nearly finished me. If you like a novel that expertly puts
you through the wringer, this is the one.
'Hilary Wainwright, poet and intellectual, returns after
the war to a blasted and impoverished France in order to
trace a child lost five years before. The novel asks: is
the child really his? And does he want him? These are questions
you can take to be as metaphorical as you wish: the novel
works perfectly well as straight narrative. It's extraordinarily
gripping: it has the page-turning compulsion of a thriller
while at the same time being written with perfect clarity
and precision.
'Had it not got so nerve-wracking towards the end, I would
have read it in one go. But Laski's understated assurance
and grip is almost astonishing. She has got a certain kind
of British intellectual down to a tee: part of the book's
nail-biting tension comes from our fear that Hilary won't
do something stupid. The rest of Little Boy Lost's
power comes from the depiction of post-war France herself.
This is haunting stuff.'
Read the Radio 4 discussion from A Good Read.
The endpaper is a fabric designed
in 1946 by the Hélène Gallèt studio
in Paris - the green is reminiscent of bourgeois France,
and the pattern has both fleur-delis and childlike, primitive
stars. |