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Other editions of book The Little Friend

  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Publishing Inc, June 6, 2005)
    None
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Hardcover (Bloomsbury Pub Ltd, Sept. 30, 2002)
    Although the Cleves generally revelled in every detail of their family history, the events of 'the terrible Mother's Day' were never, ever discussed. On that day, nine-year-old Robin Cleves, loved by all for his whims and peculiarities, was found hanging by the neck from a rope slung over a black-tupelo tree in his own garden. Eleven years later, the mystery - with its taunting traces of foul play - was no nearer a solution than it had been on the day it happened.This isn't good enough for Robin's youngest sister Harriet. Only a baby when the tragedy occurred, but now twelve-years-old and steeped in the adventurous daring of favourite writers such as Stevenson, Kipling and Conan Doyle, Harriet is ready and eager to find and punish her brother's killer. Her closest friend Hely - who would try anything to make Harriet love him - has sworn allegiance to her call for revenge. But the world these plucky twelve-year-olds are to encounter has nothing to do with child's play: it is dark, adult and all too menacing. In Donna Tartt's Mississippi, the sense of place and sense of the past mingle redolently with rich human drama to create a collective alchemy. Here eccentric great aunts bustle about graciously despite faded fortunes and a child's inquiring mind not only unearths telling family artefacts, but stirs up a neighbourhood nest of vipers and larceny. THE LITTLE FRIEND is a profoundly involving novel which demonstrates how the imaginary life embraces what literature we read, what special places we inhabit and what kindred souls we recognize, to help crack open even the darkest secrets life has hiding for us.
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Unknown Binding (Knopf, Jan. 1, 2003)
    None
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Paperback (Bloomsbury, March 15, 2002)
    TRADE PB
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Paperback (Vintage Books / Random House, March 15, 2003)
    None
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Hardcover (Random House Large Print, March 15, 2001)
    None
  • The Little Friend: 21 Great Bloomsbury Reads for the 21st Century

    Donna Tartt

    Paperback (Bloomsbury Publishing PLC, Jan. 2, 2007)
    None
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Paperback (Vintage, Oct. 28, 2003)
    Bestselling author Donna Tartt returns with a grandly ambitious and utterly riveting novel of childhood, innocence and evil. The setting is Alexandria, Mississippi, where one Mother’s Day a little boy named Robin Cleve Dufresnes was found hanging from a tree in his parents’ yard. Twelve years later Robin’s murder is still unsolved and his family remains devastated. So it is that Robin’s sister Harriet—unnervingly bright, insufferably determined, and unduly influenced by the fiction of Kipling and Robert Louis Stevenson--sets out to unmask his killer. Aided only by her worshipful friend Hely, Harriet crosses her town’s rigid lines of race and caste and burrows deep into her family’s history of loss. Filled with hairpin turns of plot and “a bustling, ridiculous humanity worthy of Dickens” (The New York Times Book Review), The Little Friend is a work of myriad enchantments by a writer of prodigious talent.
  • The Little Friend - A Novel

    Donna Tartt

    Unknown Binding (Vintage, March 15, 2002)
    Fictional Novel
  • The Little Friend by Donna Tartt

    Donna Tartt

    Audio CD (Random House, Inc., March 15, 2002)
    None
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Hardcover (Alfred A. Knopf, March 15, 2002)
    None
  • The Little Friend

    Donna Tartt

    Audio Cassette (Bloomsbury Pub Ltd, Sept. 30, 2002)
    In a small Mississippi town, Harriet Cleve Dusfrenes grows up haunted by the murder of her brother, who was found hanging from a tree in their yard when she was just a baby. Robin's killer was never identified, and the family has never recovered from the tragedy. Harriet's father mostly absent, her mother incapacitated by grief, and her teenage sister unable to recall what she saw that terrible day. Harriet lives largely in the world of her imagination, alone even in company, obsessed by Robin who is a link to the happier past she knows from stories and photographs. And then one summer, the year she turns twelve, Harriet decides to find his murderer and exact his revenge. Even more transfixing than its predecessor, "The Little Friend" is a dark novel of lost childhood, breathtaking in its ambition and power, rich in moral paradox and profound insights into human frailty.