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A Stranger in the Family by Robert Barnard — book cover

A Stranger in the Family

by Robert Barnard
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Overview

From Robert Barnard, the internationally acclaimed Diamond Dagger–winning crime writer . . .

Kit Philipson has always felt like something of a stranger in his family. Growing up as the only child of professional parents in Glasgow, Scotland, he had every advantage. His mother was a teacher; his father, a journalist, escaped from Nazi Germany at the age of three on one of the 1939 Kindertransports. But on her deathbed, Kit’s mother tells him he was adopted and that his birth name was Novello. Soon, vague memories of his early life begin to surface: his nursery, pictures on the wall, the smell of his birth mother when she’d been cooking. And, sometimes, there are more disturbing memories—of strangers taking him by the hand and leading him away from the only family he had ever known. A search of old newspaper files reveals that a three-year-old boy named Peter Novello was abducted from his parents’ holiday hotel in Sicily in 1989. Now the young man who has known himself only as Kit sets out to rediscover his past, the story of two three-year-old boys torn from their mothers in very different circumstances. Kit’s probing inquiries are sure to bring surprises. They may also unearth dangerous secrets that dare never be revealed.

With sharp wit and deep insight, Robert Barnard sweeps away all preconceptions in this powerful study of maternal love and the danger of obsession.

About the Author, Robert Barnard

Robert Barnard was born in Essex. He was educated at Balliol College, Oxford, and after completing his degree he taught English at universities in Australia and Norway, where he completed his doctorate on Dickens. He returned to England to become a full-time writer and now lives in Leeds with his wife Louise, cat Durdles and dog Peggotty. He has been awarded both the prestigious CWA Cartier Diamond Dagger, in recognition of a lifetime’s achievement in crime writing, as well as the CWA prize for the best short story of the year.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

Kit Philipson (born Peter Novello), the reserved hero of this intriguing suspense novel from Diamond Dagger Award–winner Barnard (Last Post), grew up with all too perfect adoptive parents in Glasgow, Scotland. Now that the couple who raised him are dead, Kit seeks answers about his past from his biological parents, and learns that his adoption stemmed from his kidnapping at age three during a Novello family holiday in Trepalu, Sicily, in 1989. His birth mother discourages him from digging into why he was abducted, while his dying birth father won't even acknowledge Kit as his own. Determined to suss out the truth, Kit discovers that his adoptive father and his birth father once had a mysterious confrontation at a conference. Kit must go back to a grandfather's dealings during WWII to move forward, but can there be a sweet family ending after all the coldness and deception? Readers will keep turning the pages to find out. (June)

Kirkus Reviews

A young man searches for his birth family. At the age of three, Peter Novello's life changed dramatically. While his family was vacationing in Sicily, he was abducted, put on a plane and handed over to the Philipsons, who renamed him Kit, adopted him and brought him up in Glasgow. Still, some memories linger, of another mother and a child's bedroom in Leeds. On her death bed, his adoptive mother's revelations about that woman, Isla Novello, set Kit, now in his early 20s, on a search for his birth family. His journey will explain how a Leeds solicitor's family that never traveled holidayed in Sicily, where their son was delivered to the Philipsons, a family of Scottish academics headed by a father who had been resettled in Britain via the World War II Kindertransport that ferried Jewish offspring out of Nazi reach. Kit's lost family had other children. They never heard him mentioned as they were growing up, and now they're worried that he might make claims against the family's assets. Still digging to find out the precise circumstances of his abduction, Kit learns his roots also encompass a string-pulling Mafioso whose machinations link Leeds, Glasgow and Sicily. Middling Barnard (The Killings on Jubilee Terrace, 2009, etc.)-that is, several paces ahead of the rest in the genre.

Book Details

Published
June 8, 2010
Publisher
Scribner
Pages
256
ISBN
9781439176764

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