The Wild
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Average customer review:Product Description
'This book ranks alongside PADDY CLARKE HA HA HA as one of the very few great contemporary novels about childhood' William Sutcliffe, Independent on Sunday 'Everything was going to be different this year' - Tess is nine years old and wants her new family to work out, even though her brother Jake is not so sure. THE WILD is a brilliant, clear-eyed evocation of the collision of families and step families, adult and childhood worlds.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #522893 in Books
- Published on: 2001-06-07
- Original language: English
- Binding: Paperback
- 256 pages
Editorial Reviews
Review
"* 'A beautiful book, savage and tender by turns. Nobody else can write this well about the bravery and the sad wisdom of children. In a culture which dins with brashness and self-advertisement, attending to Esther Freud's still, truthful voice becomes not only a pleasure but a necessity' Jonathan Coe"
About the Author
Esther Freud trained as an actress before writing her first novel HIDEOUS KINKY, shortlisted for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize and made into a feature film starring Kate Winslet. Her novels have been translated into thirteen languages.
Customer Reviews
Becoming a kid again
I loved this book, which I snapped up after reading Hideous Kinky, and couldn't put it down (the sort of book you are tempted to read under your desk at work to find out what happened after you got off the train).
Tess is beautifully drawn character: I could have wept at her attempts to get William to love her - knitting him a pair of lumpy socks, caring for his chickens like royalty, desperate to be chosen to help him cook - all of this is described in such honest childlike detail you can really feel her pain when she doesn't get the approval she is seeking. Her anguish when her painful secret is revealed is spot on, how well we all remember the humiliation of something Important (to us) being exposed by unthinking adults.
Her brother Jake is also a wonderfully evoked character. He is protective of her but distant when it comes to his own inner feelings on their unconventional lives, and you always sense the tide of emotion he is holding back which is revealed at the end of the book.
I was also charmed by the sense of freedom of childhood, the wild setting for the book is contrasted with the maze of London which Jake and Tess have to negotiate to see their part-time dad.
Buy it!
Redolent evocation of childhood.
This book made me feel the need to reassess my own attitudes on how fiction should be written. It was so refreshing to have a character like William who was so unsympathetic and unlikeable, yet without being an out and out villain, after all, he didn't do anything quite so bad, just made mistakes like all adults. His detachment from, yet selfish need for his children probably struck some uncomfortable chords with some readers. This book makes no apologies for showing up parents to be fallable and capable of being selfish, and in some respects can be quite savage in tone, whilst also tenderly demonstrating the naivety and wisdom that children posses. My only criticism would be the need for a little more background and a few less loose ends (what happened to Victor and Felicity?). A winsome evocation of a rural childhood, that has a dream like quality, punctuated with grit and realism.
brilliantly accurate account of a child's world
Esther Freud has done it again - only this time it's even better. She really is able to get completely under the skin of a child.
10-year-old Tess is uprooted with her brother to go and lodge with William and his three daughters. William is such an incredibly-drawn character: he's one of those people so convinced of his own worth and decency, but in actual fact is a wicked, self-obsessed, vain creature. I conceived such a loathing for his fake levity, pseudo-hippy stance that I almost considered stopping being a vegetarian just because he is.
The terrible difficulty for a child to comprehend and have any impact upon a baffling adult world is so accurate here.
This is a wonderful, perceptive, moving book which is achingly beautiful in the way it's written. I couldn't stop reading it, and had to put my life on hold until I finished it...





