by Alison Smith (Author)
As children, Roy and Alison Smith were so close their mother called them by one name: Alroy. But on a cool summer morning when she was fifteen, Alison woke to learn that Roy, three years older, was dead. While her Catholic parents wrestled with their faith and their grief, Alison made the mourners coffee, went to school to be taught by the nuns, and - being all her parents had left - set about coping. Over the next few years, she is blessed every morning by her father, gets a job at the school, and eventually begins a secret affair. But underneath this life run her private rituals of mourning, her increasing idiosyncrasies, unnoticed by parents trying to heal themselves and teachers anxious to be kind. Until suddenly, Alison begins to realize something's wrong. This is a book about grief - living with it and failing to recognize that you're suffering from it - but it's also a love story, about Alison's love of her brother, of her childhood, and finally of life. Name All the Animals is a compellingly beautiful, richly realized portrait of innocence struggling with loss.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Edition: New
Publisher: Scribner
Published: 05 Apr 2004
ISBN 10: 0743252322
ISBN 13: 9780743252324
Book Overview: Alison Smith is being compared to Alice Sebold and Sue Monk Kidd for her insightful, compelling exploration of tragedy in family life. Sebold's THE LOVELY BONES has now sold close to 250,000 copies in the UK The market has shown an enormous appetite for the literary memoir. NAME ALL THE ANIMALS, in the tradition of Lorna Sage and Andrea Ashworth, takes the genre to a new level Massive super-proof mailing to the trade and press NAME ALL THE ANIMALS will be supported by widespread review coverage and author PR on publication Publication is eagerly anticipated on an international level: rights have now been sold in eight countries