Roland Butter
8th January 2008, 20:29
I love this book so much it's about time I wrote a review!
Title: What Was Lost
Author: Catherine O’Flynn
Synopsis: Ten year old Kate Meaney, a bright but serious child, lives with her grandmother. Kate’s only close friends are Adrian, the 22 year old son of a local newsagent, and the troubled new girl at school, Teresa. As proprietor of detective agency Falcon Investigations, Kate, accompanied by her business partner Mickey the toy monkey, spends her out-of-school hours patrolling the malls of Green Oaks shopping centre, convinced that, before long, her relentless surveillance and meticulous note-taking will thwart a major crime.
Christmas Day at Green Oaks, and security guard Kurt is listlessly scanning the CCTV monitors. Suddenly, fleetingly, the figure of a young girl appears in the deserted banking hall, a toy monkey peeping from her bag. Intrigued, and recalling the case of local girl Kate Meaney, who disappeared without trace 20 years earlier, Kurt and disillusioned store manager Lisa set out to find the little girl who has flitted across the screen.
Review: What Was Lost is an absorbing read which drew me in from the start with its well drawn account of Kate’s life, its sympathetic characterisation and its cleverly interwoven plots.
It’s part mystery: why did Kate go missing? Was she frightened of being sent away to boarding school? Was loner Adrian involved in her disappearance, as local people believed? Why are Kurt and Lisa so interested in the case of Kate Meaney? It’s part ghost story - how could the image of a little girl appear 20 years after her disappearance? And it’s part touching childhood reminiscence - many BCF readers will surely see something of themselves in the young Kate.
But it’s so much more. At its heart, What Was Lost is, as its title suggests, a tale of loss - loss of family and friends, loss of ambition, loss of hope. And it’s about searching for the things that we’ve lost, the places that quest takes us, and the things we find when we make that journey.
This is a book I read in three days (as opposed to my normal three weeks!), so that should be some indication of just how gripping I found it. A very impressive and thought-provoking debut from Catherine O’Flynn, and one I’d recommend highly.
Title: What Was Lost
Author: Catherine O’Flynn
Synopsis: Ten year old Kate Meaney, a bright but serious child, lives with her grandmother. Kate’s only close friends are Adrian, the 22 year old son of a local newsagent, and the troubled new girl at school, Teresa. As proprietor of detective agency Falcon Investigations, Kate, accompanied by her business partner Mickey the toy monkey, spends her out-of-school hours patrolling the malls of Green Oaks shopping centre, convinced that, before long, her relentless surveillance and meticulous note-taking will thwart a major crime.
Christmas Day at Green Oaks, and security guard Kurt is listlessly scanning the CCTV monitors. Suddenly, fleetingly, the figure of a young girl appears in the deserted banking hall, a toy monkey peeping from her bag. Intrigued, and recalling the case of local girl Kate Meaney, who disappeared without trace 20 years earlier, Kurt and disillusioned store manager Lisa set out to find the little girl who has flitted across the screen.
Review: What Was Lost is an absorbing read which drew me in from the start with its well drawn account of Kate’s life, its sympathetic characterisation and its cleverly interwoven plots.
It’s part mystery: why did Kate go missing? Was she frightened of being sent away to boarding school? Was loner Adrian involved in her disappearance, as local people believed? Why are Kurt and Lisa so interested in the case of Kate Meaney? It’s part ghost story - how could the image of a little girl appear 20 years after her disappearance? And it’s part touching childhood reminiscence - many BCF readers will surely see something of themselves in the young Kate.
But it’s so much more. At its heart, What Was Lost is, as its title suggests, a tale of loss - loss of family and friends, loss of ambition, loss of hope. And it’s about searching for the things that we’ve lost, the places that quest takes us, and the things we find when we make that journey.
This is a book I read in three days (as opposed to my normal three weeks!), so that should be some indication of just how gripping I found it. A very impressive and thought-provoking debut from Catherine O’Flynn, and one I’d recommend highly.