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What Was Lost (Unabridged)
 
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What Was Lost (Unabridged) [Audio Download]

by Catherine O'Flynn (Author), Colleen Prendergast (Narrator)
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (105 customer reviews)
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Product details

  • Audio Download
  • Listening Length: 6 hours and 33 minutes
  • Program Type: Audiobook
  • Version: Unabridged
  • Publisher: ISIS Audio Books
  • Audible Release Date: 15 July 2008
  • Language: English
  • ASIN: B002SQH7R8
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (105 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Winner of the Costa Book Awards, First Novel Award, 2007.
Loglisted for the Man Booker Prize, 2007.

A lost little girl with her notebook and toy monkey appears on the CCTV screens of the Green Oaks shopping centre, evoking memories of junior detective Kate Meaney, missing for 20 years.

Kurt, a security guard with a sleep disorder, and Lisa, a disenchanted deputy manager at Your Music, follow her through the centre's endless corridors - welcome relief from the tedium of their lives.

But as this after-hours friendship grows in intensity, it brings new loss and new longing to light. This is 21st-century Britain with its addiction to consumerism, absurdity, and loneliness, unspoken guilt and hidden lives.

©2007 Catherine O'Flynn; (P)2008 Isis Publishing Ltd

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
138 of 144 people found the following review helpful
By MisterHobgoblin TOP 500 REVIEWER VINE™ VOICE
Format:Paperback
What Was Lost starts with a very bold move - a narrative told by a small girl who works as a private detective, helped by her cuddly monkey Mickey. It is a brave writer indeed who starts with such a ridiculous premise. But Catherine O'Flynn pulls it off and as the first section develops, it becomes clear that the girl - Kate Meaney - has a troubled homelife and a burning desire to escape it. She duly spends time engaged in surveillance at Green Oaks, the newly built shopping centre.

Then, in a sudden jump of twenty years, the narrative focuses on Lisa, the duty manager at a record store in Green Oaks. It becomes clear that Kate disappeared all those years ago, and whilst she has been largely forgotten, she has started to haunt the memories of those few people to have noticed her in her last days. Self evidently, the narrative eventually reveals Kate's fate.

The star of the show, though, is Green Oaks itself. Shopping centres are brilliant places (like airports). Shiny and colourful on the public side, but with a hidden belly of service corridors, stockrooms, offices, security systems and such like. They have a ready made cast, both of people working there or people passing through: customers, thieves, drifters, lunatics... Some chapters end with rather brilliant - and irrelevant - monologues from some of those who spend time in and around the shopping centre. A particular gem is the mystery shopper. Then there are also the dialogues between staff and challenging customers - for example, the chap who has had a classical music cassette on order for 23 months and has been strung along by the store assistant just for fun. This element of the novel plays like a Magnus Mills work - utterly deadpan in the absurdity of the situation. For all the characters in What Was Lost, the shopping centre is more than a place to shop - it has seized their lives.

The plot and character development play second fiddle to the daily soap opera of Green Oaks. The character development in particular is not as strong in the present day narrative than in the 1984 element. Kate Meaney, Adrian and Teresa come through with precision and clarity, even though they are largely confined to the first 60 or so pages. Lisa, Kurt, Gavin et al don't seem to have such strong characterization. Perhaps the action got in the way. And purists could, doubtless, complain that there is too much reliance on coincidence. But that would be curmudgeonly.

Overall, though, this is a hugely enjoyable, satirical look at the life of a shopping centre, with a good dose of creepy mystery thrown in. It is well written and beautifully timed. What was lost is a classy piece of writing that deserves the prize nominations it has received.
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49 of 51 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
I just finished reading this book today and I almost cried. Corny, I know but it's indicative of a great book when the reader is reluctant to let the characters 'go' at the end. 'What was lost' is about how various characters are drawn together by the disappearance of a little girl. It's really about the misery of human existence when you let resignation and indifference set in. Great characterisation, which is something I adore in fiction and good TV/Film. It reminds me of 'Purple Hibiscus' in the sense that it can articulate in such a beautiful way the banalities of everyday life but not make them sound mundane and inconsequential. I guess it's these things that kill the soul slowly if we're not careful.

As has already been pointed out there is a good dose of acerbic wit. From underhanded subtle quips about 'Daily Mail' readers, observations of sadistic primary school teachers to the careful descriptions of customers in all their idiosyncratic glory.

I think the denouement of the book came together beautifully. Despite the macabre twist there are little hints of hope for the future of some of the more tormented characters.

There are many readable novels out there. Still it takes a book like this, executed in such a simple but effective way, seemingly effortless, to remind you there are some writers who belong in a class of their own. I hope Ms O'Flynn's future offerings live up to the promise.
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26 of 27 people found the following review helpful
An Excellent Read 3 Jan 2008
Format:Paperback
What Was Lost is the story of the disappearance of Kate Meaney, a most appealing ten year old who spends her free time learning to be a detective. The story starts in the early 1980s as she spends much of her out of school time at Green Oaks shopping centre in Birmingham. Here she watches and makes notes on suspicious looking people and events.

As the story progresses, Green Oaks itself becomes the glue of the novel as most of the action takes place here. The Shopping Centre seems to have a life of its own and the author succeeds in giving a real flavour of the place through some of the people who work there and are tied up in Kate Meaney's story whether in the early 80s or 20 years later.

I found the story gripping and warm and wanted to hear more about the people involved. I would thoroughly recommend this book.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
When it was good it was very good
I had an odd reason for reading this novel. Somebody told me my novel reminded them of What Is Lost, as both are set in shopping centres. Read more
Published 26 days ago by G. A. Ward
LOST: A small girl...with detective notebook in hand and a toy monkey...
Catherine O'Flynn's novel WHAT WAS LOST was on the longlist for the 2010 Man Booker Award, a prestigious literary reward for writing the best in fiction in English during the year. Read more
Published 1 month ago by janebbooks
Kate thought of Teresa...and more than ever Kate wanted to avert a...
I found this an enjoyable and highly atmospheric novel, though it has its poignant moments, there is no excess sentiment, given that this deals with the disappearance of... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Eileen Shaw
What Was Lost Book Review-2011
In 2007, British author Catherine O'Flynn presented her debut novel, What Was Lost, which with time has stirred a great deal of interest. Read more
Published 5 months ago by rmcinnes
enthralling
fantastic book, really unusual read it in 24 hours as I couldn't put it down, hope Catherine O'Flynn writes more soon
Published 6 months ago by mandy holmes
A modern myth as well as a great story
Being from Birmingham increased my interest in this book, but only marginally so, because although the writer is from Birmingham and mentions some districts that are familiar to... Read more
Published 6 months ago by John Williams
What was lost? Two weeks of my life reading this.
I found this a tedious read. The main plot driver - i.e. the disappearance of Kate - was sidelined for too long while we listened to the cliched musings and boring backstories of a... Read more
Published 10 months ago by LuluBee
Gripping and Mysterious
A double narrative that moves back and forth between the present and the past whilst revealing to us what became of the protagonist Kate. Read more
Published 11 months ago by LindyLouMac
Very moving and very profound of human nature.
I really have to put this book in my top 20 best of lifetime reads, and by the way I am 50 and have read a lot of books! Read more
Published 13 months ago by Andy
Utter perfection!
Having been given this book as part of my book group I found it amazing that it had been written about a place so close to my home, I live but a stones throw away from the main... Read more
Published 14 months ago by Mrs. R. Cottingham
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