When Madeline Was Young

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Description

Women on the block called Mac’s sister Madeline a beauty, a ‘real Princess Grace’. But in spite of her height and mature body, to Mac, his sister never looked any different to other children. Until one summer evening in 1960, when his cousin Buddy taunted him with the odd truth of their family: Madeline was not really Mac’s sister, but his father’s first wife. A terrible accident had left her brain-damaged, with the intellect of a seven-year-old. When his father remarried, Madeline became part of his new family, devotedly cared for by his second wife like one of their own children.In 2003, Mac, now a middle-aged doctor, attends the funeral of Buddy’s son, killed in Iraq. There, the divisions that drove two branches of their family apart are brought sharply into focus: on one side, belligerently liberal doves, on the other, defiantly patriotic hawks. Also revealed is the impact of Madeline’s tragedy on the family, how it has shaped and altered forever the boundaries of love. In this moving story that follows one American family over several decades of wars fought on foreign soil, Jane Hamilton, with her usual humour and keen observation of family relationships, deftly explores notions of innocence and experience, loyalty and betrayal, sacrifice and devotion.

Additional information

Weight 0.241 kg
Dimensions 2.2 × 12.7 × 19.8 cm
by

Format

Paperback

Language

Pages

352

Publisher

Year Published

2008-2-26

Imprint

Publication City/Country

London, United Kingdom

ISBN 10

0552773670

About The Author

Jane Hamilton is the author of The Book of Ruth, winner of the PEN/Hemingway Award for First Fiction and A Map of the World, both selected for Oprah Winfrey's influential book club. Her most recent novels are The Short History of a Prince, shortlisted for the Orange Prize, Disobedience and When Madeline Was Young. She lives with her husband and children on an apple farm in Wisconsin.

Jane Hamilton's trademark milieu is the ordinary American family, elevated to an almost epic nobility. Her fifth novel continues this tradition, with the rising bodycount in war providing the topical backdrop to an examination of the notions of devotion and sacrifice.

Other text

Exquisite . . . this carefully nuanced tale has the texture and discursive quality of a memoir, in which the narrator deciphers family secrets by reflecting on pivotal moments from the past.

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