![]() ![]() Before any of this is explained, the story moves back 14 years to the day Theo's mother dies, when he is on the cusp of adolescence. In the first section, the narrator, Theo Decker, is holed up in an Amsterdam hotel, looking at newspapers written in Dutch, which he can't understand he is searching for his name in articles illustrated with pictures of police cars and crime scene tapes. And now, in The Goldfinch, Tartt has a 50‑page two-part opening. The Little Friend starts with the death of a child who, by page 15, is found hanging by a piece of rope from a tree branch, his red hair "the only thing about him that was the right colour any more". In The Secret History, the one-page prologue gives us a murder and a narrator who has helped to commit it. ![]() I t is dangerous to write openings as compelling as Donna Tartt's. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |