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Bestselling author of Room, Emma Donoghue returns with her new masterpiece, Akin, a brilliant tale of love, loss and family.
Noah is only days away from his first trip back to Nice since he was a child when a social worker calls looking for a temporary home for Michael, his eleven-year-old great-nephew. Though he has never met the boy, he gets talked into taking him along to France.
This odd couple, suffering from jet lag and culture shock, argue about everything from steak haché to screen time, and the trip is looking like a disaster. But as Michael's sharp eye and ease with tech help Noah unearth troubling details about their family’s past, both come to grasp the risks that loved ones take for one another, and find they are more akin than they knew.
Written with all the tenderness and psychological intensity that made Room a huge bestseller, Akin is a funny, heart-wrenching tale of an old man and a young boy who unpick their painful stories and embark on writing a new one together.
350 pages, Kindle Edition
First published September 3, 2019
“He and this boy were quite alien to each other, he decide. Yet, in an odd way, akin.”
“And Mr. Selvaggio is your great-uncle, which is another kind of uncle.”
“What's so great about him?” Micheal wanted to know.
Whether that was ignorance or wit, it did make Noah smile.”
“Such convoluted grammar death required: what tense to describe the hypothetical emotions of a woman who didn't exist anymore?”
“In the pictures Michael looked older, Noah thought; harder. But really, eleven — that was barely formed.”
“Why don't you start it now?”
“I'm good.”
Funny how that had come to mean no.
“How could you do your homework if you didn't even have a home to work in?”
“He supposed it was always that way with the dead; they slid away before we knew enough to ask them the right questions. All we could do was remember them, as much as we could remember of them, whether it was accurate or not Walk the same streets that they'd walked; take our turn.”