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321 pages, Paperback
First published December 18, 2017
“The past was a ghost, gone in essence, but ever present, lurking in the background with its queries and its doubts.”As The Missing Girl segues effortlessly between 1982 and the present day Jenny Quintana conveys the ebb and flow of both the family dynamics, the fallout from Gabriella’s disappearance and the withdrawal of each member into their own solitary world of grief and loneliness. As mother, Esther, effectively stops functioning and withdraws from society, husband Albert is driven to the brink by his inability to put things right and a feeling of having failed his family. As we hear from Anna as a frustrated twelve-year-old, Quintana captures the voice of a child resentful at not being made privy to the whispers and secrets of the older generations yet piecing together the details she is able to understand. Capturing the spirit of the early-eighties era and imbuing the novel with the charm of village life it is the stories of jam making and whiling away the long summer holidays in a simpler time when curious children explored and family life was sacrosanct that resonate the most. In the 1982 timeline each of the Flores’s clan are painted in vivid detail making their gradual estrangement all the more heartbreaking.
So much to miss about the 80s![]()