
by KatherineSilver (Translator), Carla Guelfenbein (Author), Carla Guelfenbein (Author), Katherine Silver (Translator)
As the adults sit down to gossip over a long wedding lunch and the rest of the children rush off to play, a young boy slips out of sight beneath the table. At twelve years old, Tommy's weak heart prevents him from joining his cousins' games, so he sets his MP3 player to record the voices chattering above him. But then the conversation turns to his mother's death and he overhears something he was never meant to know: that she didn't die of an illness, but suicide.Confused and hurt, Tommy keeps what he has learned to himself and begins his own secret investigation into what really happened. At the same time, his father and step-mother have problems of their own to contend with. Juan is racked by private grief and guilt after the death of one of his patients (a boy of his son's age), and Alma, his second wife, senses an increasing distance in their marriage and gradually finds herself drawn back towards an old flame. As all three withdraw into their own worlds, leaving more and more unsaid between them, their family story moves inexorably, affectingly towards its devastating conclusion.
Format: Paperback
Pages: 320
Publisher: Portobello Books Ltd
Published: 05 May 2011
ISBN 10: 1846272319
ISBN 13: 9781846272318
As Carla Guelfenbein demonstrates in this intricately woven novel, the pursuit of individual fulfilment and happiness can lead ineluctably to tragedy. Subtle, clearsighted, and compassionate. - J M Coetzee
A beautiful novel - Grazia
From foreboding beginnings, The Rest is Silence progresses to a tragic climax ... a bleakly emotional novel. - *** Tina Jackson, Metro
[Written] with a refreshingly guileless passion... Guelfenbein is a steely truth-teller. - Adrian Turpin, Financial Times
In Guelfenbein's tender story, the unravelling of memories is a potent force... but as well as examining the role of memory in dealing with loss, The Rest is Silence is also about the redemptive power of love. - Lucy Popescu, Independent