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The Little Friend
 
 

The Little Friend (Hardcover)

by Donna Tartt (Author)
2.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (34 customer reviews)

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Product details

  • Hardcover: 576 pages
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC; First Edition, First Impression edition (22 Oct 2002)
  • Language English
  • ISBN-10: 0747562113
  • ISBN-13: 978-0747562115
  • Product Dimensions: 23.6 x 15.8 x 5.6 cm
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars See all reviews (34 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 293,431 in Books (See Bestsellers in Books)

    Popular in this category:

    #8 in  Books > Fiction > Authors, A-Z > T > Tartt, Donna

Product Description

Amazon.co.uk Review
Ten years in the writing, it can hardly be said that The Little Friend, Donna Tartt's second novel and the follow-up to her phenomenally successful and assured debut The Secret History, was rushed out. But was it worth the wait? Write about what you know is an old adage and much of the appeal of her first book was that its sense of place--an exclusive New England campus was clearly and so adroitly drawn from intimate experience. Here, the Mississippi-born Tartt utilises, piercingly on occasions, the American landscape of her own childhood.

The Cleves--Charlotte, Grandma Edith, Great Aunt Adelaide, Aunts Libby and Tat--are a southern family of noble stock but, by the early 1970s, diminished numbers and wealth; haunted by the motiveless, unsolved murder of 9-year-old Robin, "their dear little Robs", a decade earlier. (The novel opens, a la Bunny's corpse in The Secret History, with his body found hanging from a black-tupelo tree in the garden: "the toes of his limp tennis shoes dangled six inches above the grass.") Harriet, Charlotte's youngest child, "neither sweet nor pretty" like her sister, Allison, but "smart" was a baby when Robin died. Now a precocious, bookish pre-teen, she is convinced she can unravel the mystery of his death. Her chief suspects are the Ratliffs, a local clan of speed-dealing ne'er-do-wells, one of whom, Danny, had been in Robin's class. (The Ratliffs own sorry histories, and in particular the corrosive influence of matriarch Gum, are tidily juxtaposed throughout the book with the varying fortunes of the Cleves.) Harriet enlists Hely, her willing schoolyard disciple, to help investigate.

For a while the novel takes on a positively Nancy Drew-esque hue; Harriet and Hely the spies, sneaking into buildings, making off with poisonous snakes and escaping from drug-addled trailer trash on bicycles. In a significant departure from The Secret History though, Tartt does not seem unduly concerned about plot and, or, pacing. She's interested in characterisation and the bickering aunts and so many of the minor characters, the odious car dealer Mr Dial, for example, "all rectitude and pickiness, sweet moral outrage itself", are realised wonderfully. This isn't to say it's not well plotted; it is, as the dénouement eventually reveals, but it is rather languid and things can get a bit soggy midway. (Overuse of the adjective "stolidly", a word that unavoidably, if quite erroneously, calls to mind heavy fruitcake, doesn't really help either.) Tartt's Southern Gothic saga may lack the page-turning thrill of her last novel but it's, ultimately, a no less impressive or rewarding work of fiction. --Travis Elborough

New Books Magazine Issue 13
"deeply absorbing and breathlessly exciting as Ms Tartt once again faultlessly explores a time, a place and a murder."

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Customer Reviews

34 Reviews
5 star:
 (7)
4 star:
 (9)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:
 (7)
1 star:
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Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (34 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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94 of 97 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Alternates between gripping and slow, 27 Oct 2002
By A Customer
The Little Friend is Donna Tartt's long awaited second novel after The Secret History. Though it shares a dense prose style with the earlier book, it is quite different in atmosphere and setting. A twelve year old girl, Harriet, spends a summer in the 1970s trying to find out who killed her brother Robin 12 years before. She has her own ideas about who is reponsible and with her friend Hely she sets about proving her suspicions. But what starts out as a fairly simple idea becomes ever more complicated, due to the large intertwining cast of characters around Harriet. She finds herself buffeted about by the adults around her. This is no simple whodunnit. It is a book about moving from childhood innocence towards maturity and adulthood, something Harriet has been dreading as she looks on her approaching puberty with horror. It is also a book about morality, and actions and consequences. But perhaps more than anything it is a book about family, an old southern family torn apart by the grief that still haunts them twelve years after the death of their golden child. They are living in the era after the civil rights movement, when people have had to adapt to new ways of living, and yet the traditional racism is still evident in the relationships between the book's family and their black housekeepers, which Harriet witnesses in shame and anger.The pacing of this book is up and down. Gripping at times, but slow in other places due to long dense sections of description, sometimes beautifully written, other times wearing and dull. The last hundred pages or so are hard to put down, and there are a number of tense, dramatic and somtimes darkly humorous scenes right through the book. The character of Harriet is extremely well drawn, and sympathetic, as is her friend Hely and the Ratliff family. Is The Little Friend as good as The Secret History? It lacks the first book's focus. As a novel centred on a young southern girl and a murder it also doesn't live up to Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird. But it is nevertheless a good novel, painted on a wider and more ambitious canvas than the first book.
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46 of 53 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars One of the best books of the year, 1 Nov 2002
By A Customer
Donna Tartt obviously faced a potentially difficult task living up to the expectations generated for her second book by the success of the first - the astonishing Secret History - and the ten year wait only heightened the hype, and the potential fall. However, she has once again delivered a quietly stunning read.

This time, rather than the rarefied elegance of Hampden College, and the beautiful but alien setting of Vermont, she chooses the more familiar fictional landscape of the South - the gothic, Faulkner-esque South - as a backdrop, and the elements of the plot are appropriately dark - the decaying family, the shadows cast by a tragic death. But, while elements in the novel are familiar and carry echoes of literary heritage, the story is never predictable (inevitable, possibly; but predictable, no) and her writing is neither pretentious, portentous, nor dull. There are of course parallels that can be drawn with The Secret History - the hero/heroine as outsider, the wildness and rage lurking just below a civilised veneer - but as this is obviously destined for many a Lit. class and companion study notes let's leave the detailed analysis for now.

I started this - and it is a huge tome, with surprisingly small print - late at night, intending just to read a few pages, and several chapters later was still glued to it. Her ear for dialogue and ability to sketch the off-beat quirks of day-to-day existence round the margins of a gripping story is still as strong as ever. Absolutely unmissable: bound to become a classic.

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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A curate's egg of a novel, 15 Dec 2002
By David Winsor (Nottingham, England.) - See all my reviews
I have just finished reading Donna Tartt's latest novel. I ts a work which borders on true greatness at times and it specialises in the superbly effective set-piece situation. Readers will never forget the horror of the loose snakes in The Mission, the eerie tranquility of Harriet's scanning of her neighbour's houses through the telescopic sight of a hunting rifle and the nerve-jangling tension of the climactic scene in the water tower.
Between these obvoius highlights the novel sucks you in, wraps around you and plunges you into the claustrophobic insularity of Mississippi in high summer. Yes, the characterization of Ida, Tatty and Eugene, for example, could be sharper and more obviously individualized but to denigrate the overall work on this account would be to miss the more subtle ironies of a clever creation. We have the child/adult world views painfully juxtaposed and, I think, we have a profound meditation upon the nature of retributive justice and recalled memory
Harriet is one of the more memorable creations in modern fiction, a dark, contemplative and driven little person who maybe shares some of the author's own life experiences.She will live with the reader long after the book has been read.
I recommend 'The Little Friend' as a gripping and thought-provoking read. It achieves what all good fiction should-that feeling of complete immersion and the knowledge that we are in the company of a writer who has an important tale to tell.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars To award this book 1 star is very unfair
Surely, anyone who has read this book cannot deny that the language is beautiful, or that the lead character and her dysfunctional family are perfectly portrayed. Read more
Published 7 months ago by Tonkfan

5.0 out of 5 stars Haunting, vivid, unputdownable
Excellent. The characters, the town, the society, are depicted beautifully, the whole atmosphere "breathes", you feel the heat, you share the characters'feelings, you have to... Read more
Published on 11 Aug 2004 by Eleni Prenzel

5.0 out of 5 stars Afrikaner's view on excellent read
There is nobody , in my opinion , that uses the english language in a more beautiful way than D. Tartt . She really introduced me to the english language as a thing of beauty . Read more
Published on 2 Feb 2004 by Karin Spykerman

1.0 out of 5 stars Disappointed!
I agree whole heartedly with the previous negative review, although I have also read the Secret History. Read more
Published on 9 Sep 2003 by ruperttw

1.0 out of 5 stars Confused genre
Not having read "The Secret History", this was my initiation to Ms. Tartt.

The novel starts with excellent character development and background history. Read more

Published on 19 Jul 2003 by Anton Stocker

3.0 out of 5 stars A potential great film
Although not as brilliant as The Secret History Tartt’s second novel is in its way a good read. Read more
Published on 14 Jul 2003 by princess3696

1.0 out of 5 stars The little friend
Disappointing, given the excellence of Donna Tartt's debut novel. The Little Friend has several great lines and ideas, buried in a stultifying morass of boring detail. One to miss.
Published on 21 Jun 2003 by Pauline

1.0 out of 5 stars Biggest Disappointment of my Life
Having relished every page of The Secret History, it was a painful 10 year wait for Tartt's follow up. Read more
Published on 3 Jun 2003

5.0 out of 5 stars The Little Friend
I have not actually finished this book yet - I am two thirds through, and I think it is great. Why? Because it is such a brilliant read. Read more
Published on 23 April 2003 by S H ARMITAGE

5.0 out of 5 stars A marvellous, original read.
‘The Little Friend’ is full of life and description that will keep the reader entranced for many hours. Read more
Published on 6 April 2003

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