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    Laura Laura

    £8.99

    "[Francis] is just so good at the transcription and transformation of everyday ordinary life, all seen from sideways on, so that everything becomes so strange and so funny."-Tessa Hadley

    ISBN: 9781787703537
    AuthorFrancis, Richard
    PublisherNameEuropa Editions (UK) Ltd
    Pub Date13/01/2022
    BindingPaperback
    Pages240
    Availability: In Stock

    "[Francis] is just so good at the transcription and transformation of everyday ordinary life, all seen from sideways on, so that everything becomes so strange and so funny."-Tessa Hadley


    An elderly academic is accosted by a homeless woman on his way home from the cinema. She tells him her name is Laura. So begins a nightmarish journey for Gerald, who is forced to confront the mystery of his own past and to ask himself if he has lived a good life - or even a decent one.


    In the course of this very funny, sometimes disturbing and often moving novel, suppressed memories return to haunt him, including the question of the role he played in a family tragedy. Above all he has to assess the harm he may have done in a long-forgotten love affair.


    Those close to him suddenly appear unfathomable as he begins to question if he truly knows those closest to him and even himself.


    The problem with exploring the past, Gerald begins to see, is that there are an infinite number of ways to travel through it.

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    "[Francis] is just so good at the transcription and transformation of everyday ordinary life, all seen from sideways on, so that everything becomes so strange and so funny."-Tessa Hadley


    An elderly academic is accosted by a homeless woman on his way home from the cinema. She tells him her name is Laura. So begins a nightmarish journey for Gerald, who is forced to confront the mystery of his own past and to ask himself if he has lived a good life - or even a decent one.


    In the course of this very funny, sometimes disturbing and often moving novel, suppressed memories return to haunt him, including the question of the role he played in a family tragedy. Above all he has to assess the harm he may have done in a long-forgotten love affair.


    Those close to him suddenly appear unfathomable as he begins to question if he truly knows those closest to him and even himself.


    The problem with exploring the past, Gerald begins to see, is that there are an infinite number of ways to travel through it.