No TellingJonathan Cape, 2003 - 516 pages No Telling, Adam Thorpe's fifth novel, is set in 1968 in the Parisian suburbs and narrated by twelve-year-old Gilles as he approaches his First Communion, puberty, and some sense of the chaos around him. His home is deeply dysfunctional: a dithering mother, a hard-drinking, womanising uncle who becomes his stepfather, and an older sister, Carole - an unbalanced revolutionary who hasn't danced her ballet steps since the death of their real father in 1960. Gilles is blithely unaware that any of this is out of the ordinary, as he and his friend Christophe try and piece together a world from fragments of rumour and hushed adult conversation. There is a deeper trauma here, however, far more shocking than anything Gilles could have dreamt of - a mystery it will take the events of the novel and eight years to resolve. Set against a backdrop of a turbulent France - as it lurches from rural piety, and a hundred years of terrible history, to a hurried modernity - Adam Thorpe has written a tour-de-force of compassion, humour and storytelling brilliance, seen through the eyes of an adolescent boy. Culminating in the Paris riots of May '68, No Telling is a thrilling and beautifully observed stu |
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anyway arms asked ballet better bloody called Carole chair Christophe cigarette closed coming course dancing dark dear didn't don't door everything eyes face fact father feel felt fingers floor front Gilles girl glass going gone hair hand happened head hear holding huge imagined inside It's Jocelyne's mother joke knew laughed legs light looked mean mother mouth moving never nice nodded nose picture Raymond remember road round running seemed shouting side sister sitting smell smiling smoke someone sort sounded standing started stayed stopped street stupid suddenly sure talking tell That's things thought told took trying turned uncle voice walked wall wasn't watching whole window woman wondered