Heaven Forbid

Heaven Forbid

by Christopher Hope (Author)

Synopsis

An unforgettable, highly acclaimed novel of African childhood by a prize winning author In the jacaranda leafed garden of his Johannesburg home, six year old Martin Donally is king of a small and perfect world. It is 1948 and life is full of buoyant childish rhymes and his colourful, Irish extended family. There's exuberant Grandpa who sings and races horses; chain smoking Auntie Fee, who always sides with the ogres in fairy tales; and above all Georgie, the family's servant and Martin's confidant. But this cosy world of fixed certainties is about to end as Martin's tale turns to one of political and personal tragedy. He can't possibly foresee the resounding defeat of the liberal government that will usher in a new era of bigotry and intolerance, nor appreciate the significance of the fact Dr Voerwoerd, architect of apartheid, is a neighbour.

And what is he to make of dour, racist, Gordon his mother's husband-to-be, a man who seems determined to shatter the care-free world of the Donally's for good? Heaven Forbid is a wise, moving tale of innocence blighted and paradise lost; an unforgettable novel of childhood, family and the impact on a private world of a crucial moment in history.

'A clever, economical novel . . . a potent rendering of childhood' - Penelope Lively

'A vivid, tender evocation of time and place, fresh and unsugared by nostalgia' Observer

'Immensely alive and involving' Sunday Times

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 336
Edition: Main Market
Publisher: Macmillan
Published: 25 Jan 2002

ISBN 10: 0333724658
ISBN 13: 9780333724651

Author Bio
Christopher Hope was born in Johannesburg. He has published six novels: A Separate Development (winner of 1981 David Higham Prize). Kruger's Alp (winner of the 1985 Whitbread Prize for Fiction), The Hottentot Room (1986). My Chocolate Redeemer (1989), Serenity House (shortlisted for 1992 Booker Prize). The Love Songs of Nathan J. Swirsky (1993), Darkest England (1996) and Me, the Moon and Elvis Presley (1997). He has written two other works of non-fiction: White Boy Running (winner of the 1998 CNA [South Africa]) and Moscow! Moscow! (1990).