Book description
A moving, inter-war family saga The German Boy from Patricia
Wastvedt, the Orange Prize Longlisted author of The River.
In 1947, Elisabeth Mander's German nephew comes to stay: Stefan
Landau, her dead sister's teenage son, whom she hates and loves before
she's even set eyes on him.
Orphaned by the war and traumatised by the last, vicious battles of
the Hitler Youth, Stefan brings with him to England only a few meagre
possessions. Among them a portrait of a girl with long copper hair by
a young painter called Michael Ross - and with it the memory, both painful
and precious, of her life and that time between the wars.
Spanning decades and generations, The German Boy tells the
moving story of two families entangled by love and friendship, divided
by prejudice and war, and of a brief encounter between a woman and a
man that touched each of their lives forever.
'An absorbing literary saga ... a sophisticated and subtly woven
story' Daily Mail
'Hypnotic, atmospheric and exquisitely written. A novel I
won't forget' Lucinda Riley, author of Hothouse Flower
'A love story at its centre which will make your heart ache' Julia
Green, author of Blue Moon
'A heart-rending story of epic proportions, thrilling and utterly
captivating. I am haunted by it still' Suzannah Dunn, author of The
Confession of Katherine Howard
Born in 1954, Patricia Wastvedt grew up in Blackheath, south London,
and spent her summers in Kent. She has a degree in Creative Arts and
an MA in Creative Writing, and her first novel, The River,
written in her late forties, was long-listed for the Orange Prize. She
teaches at Bath Spa University, and is also a manuscript editor. She
lives and writes in a cottage in Somerset.
Patricia Wastvedt was born in London in 1954 and lives in northern
France. She is the author of
The River
, which as Longlisted for the Orange Prize. This is her second novel.