Huge thanks to Nosy Crow for kindly sending me an ARC for review purposes! 😃
The Life and Time of Lonny Quicke tells the story of a young boy with an extraordinary power. Lonny is a lifeling, and is able to restore life to the dying; but, by lengthening the lives of other living things, he shortens his own. Lonny is equally blessed and cursed.
To my surprise, the novel foregoes the character's own discovery of this power, launching us straight into the story. It makes for an altogether more compelling opening. Kirsty Applebaum hits a perfect rhythm right from the outset: she ends each chapter resolutely, but there's always something to impel you to read one more, and one more, and one more. It's truly masterful. Unsurprisingly, I read the entire book in a single, glorious sitting.
The novel is divided into three acts, and much of the action takes place on the day of the town's annual lifeling festival, a parochial event which actually brought me quite a sense of unease (perhaps because the songs and merriment gave me Summerisle vibes!). There are folktales which are told and retold, shaped and reshaped, and a keen reader will enjoy spotting the variance between them. The story has a quick pace, the characters are well developed, and the emotional beats are perfectly crafted.
Like Troofriend before it, The Life and Time of Lonny Quicke is an intelligent, emotional novel. As an adult reader, it was sometimes easy to forget that it's a novel aimed at children. Kirsty never dumbs down, presenting a story with depth and her trademark poignancy. This is a unique tale, the like of which could only come from the imagination of Kirsty Applebaum, and which could only be given life by her delicate, thoughtful touch.