The Little Friend, book review

Category: book Nook

Post 1 by TexasRed (I'll have the last word, thank you!) on Thursday, 02-Mar-2006 11:46:40

The Little Friend by Donna Tartt
Book Number:RC 55856
5 sound cassettes :
1960s Mississippi. Nine-year-old Robin Dufresnes is found hanging from a
tree. Twelve years later, his tomboyish sister Harriet, an infant at the
time of
the murder, begins to search for the killer. With the help of her friend
Hely, she concentrates on drug dealer Danny Ratliff. Strong language and
some violence. Bestseller. 2002.
Below is an interview and a bit more about this book. I really enjoyed this
one. I was completely captivated with the story and her style of writing.
I give this one a 5 out of 5, a 10 out of 10.
Happy reading,
Carla/TexasRed

"If I could write a book a year and maintain the same quality, I'd be happy.
But I don't think I'd have any fans."

Decade of Silence

Thus Donna Tartt explains the decade of silence since her debut novel, The
Secret History, made her the international literary sensation of 1992.

Until the publication of her second book in October 2002, Tartt endured
rumours of writer's block and nervous hermithood. But now that The Little
Friend
is safely in the bag, she says calmly, "it just took a while to write."

Trying to meet readers' high expectations after The Secret History was never
going to be easy, but Tartt wasn't intimidated by the search for a new idea.
She said at the time, "I have my life to resort to."

Mississippi childhood

For The Little Friend, its author has dug deep into her southern background.
Raised among the antebellum mansions of Grenada, Mississippi, Tartt
experienced
the shabby gentility of a changing south. Her extended family members were
the stuff of Tennessee Williams and William Faulkner and, for Tartt, "books
were the great escape".

Fixated by Robert Louis Stevenson and Peter Pan, young Donna was taken on
her own imaginative odyssey by her grandfather. A believer in the power of
medicine,
he fed his granddaughter codeine cough syrup, and much of her childhood was
a "languorous undersea existence".

A less dubious family contribution was a love of Dickens and Kipling, and
Tartt's own storytelling talents were later nurtured at college. Her
professor
told her she was a genius and, even among classmates such as Bret Easton
Ellis, the chain-smoking, Nie[t z s]che-sprouting Tartt cut a dash.

Professional houseguest

While fellow graduates sought conventional employment, Tartt became a
"professional houseguest" who started writing The Secret History. Nine years
later,
the classical cleverness and adolescent angst of her murderous aesthetes
sold millions and meant the author need never again pick up her pen.

But despite being translated into 23 languages, Tartt remains "a writer, not
a TV personality", whose job it is to "dive deep". Now aged 38, the
gamine-featured,
pint-sized perfectionist is unfazed by the transitory nature of celebrity,
concentrating instead on "the five books I have in me".

Of her own style, Tartt remains vague, following Kipling's instructions only
to "drift, wait and obey".

Her continuing royalties have afforded her as much time to drift and wait as
she needs to produce another opus. Her army of fans may be champing at the
bit for more of her work, but Donna Tartt remains a defiantly bookish
character, "moving a comma round very happily for hours".

Post 2 by Siriusly Severus (The ESTJ 1w9 3w4 6w7 The Taskmaste) on Saturday, 02-Feb-2008 18:58:11

Yeah, I'll check it out! Ooo, a lynching, eh? that's the most interesting book then.