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Light Perpetual

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Light Perpetual by Francis Spufford

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By Francis Spufford

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3 reviews

From the best-selling, prize-winning author of Golden Hill, a novel of five everyday lives – their dramas, their redemptions, their commonplace miracles – in the teeming, ever-changing immensity of 20th century London.

Reviews

19 Apr 2022

Skeet

The first chapter of "Light Perpetual" begins with the explanation of how a powerful bomb works and presensts us with the imagining of lives continuing in another dimension, perhaps the dark space between atoms. As children we play and imagine that when I do this with my toy (doll, truck, whatever toy) this will happen. This book is that childhood manner of playing only using the lives of five children who were vaporized by that bomb exploding.
The manner in which the author writes is beautiful however it becomes convoluted and difficult to follow the hopping from time to time and child to child. I found myself having to stop and figure out the who and how long very disruptive and distracting. It took away a lot of the enjoyment and was frustrating.
Additionally, I kept expecting the life stories to begin to intertwine and was disappointed that they didn't.
After the intriguing first chapter I felt let down by the remainder of the book.

04 Apr 2022

GillianParr

I found this book disjointed and not easy to follow. A promising start then the book just went downhill.

30 Mar 2021

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There is some beautiful writing in this story. A bomb falls on a Woolworths store in a fictional borough of London (based on a true story) killing many and in particular these 5 children whose stories we then follow in terms of what might have happened in their lives had they lived. Their lives unravel in a spasmodic sense. I think I had imagined that we might be checking in on them all at a set interval and initially this seemed to be the case but after a while that structure appeared to fall away. Not all of the characters were likeable and their lives not grand or startling in terms of what they contributed to society BUT that said there are some very strong observations and difficult issues that are encountered - such as the existence of the National Front and the unforgiving attack on a medical student. It is humanity warts and all.

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