![]() ![]() ![]() An author’s note reveals that Faber (who had said he would stop writing novels for adults after The Book of Strange New Things was published in 2015) began this story decades ago, in part as a homage to Charles Dickens. The fantasy tale that results doesn’t quite come off. When she attends the funeral of her beloved history teacher, Professor Dodderfield (“Oerfiel” in the new parlance), she discovers that he’s not actually dead and it is he and his companion sphinx, Nelly, who draw Dhikilo into their plan to rescue the vanished letter D. The letter D mysteriously vanishes from everyone’s speech – everyone except Dhikilo’s. ![]() Just a few chapters in, something extremely odd begins to happen to language. ![]() This might lead the reader – whether younger or older – to believe that this story is going to take Dhikilo on a journey of discovery into her past but that’s not what occurs at all. Girls at school make fun of her name: “Some names were a problem to have and others weren’t.” Dhikilo was born in Somaliland – not Somalia, as she must repeatedly insist – and adopted by Ruth and Malcolm when she was just a year old. Dhikilo leads what might look like an ordinary 13-year-old girl’s life, but things are not always easy for her. E very morning, the heroine of Michel Faber’s new book wakes in her cosy bed on the south coast of England. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |