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Toby's Room

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

It is 1917 and Elinor Brooke, a young painter, is studying art in London while her beloved brother Toby serves on the front as a medical officer. When Toby goes missing and is presumed dead, the devastated Elinor refuses to accept it. A letter she finds hidden among his belongings reveals that Toby knew he wasn't coming back and implies that his friend, medic Kit Neville, knows why. But Kit has been horribly disfigured and is reeling from shell shock.

While Elinor tries to piece together the mystery of what happened to her brother, she uses her drawing skills to aid in the surgical reconstruction of those who have suffered unspeakable losses-their faces, their memories, their very minds.

Masterfully written and daringly ambitious, Toby's Room explores at all levels of it means to be human.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 6, 2012
      Fans of Barker’s Regeneration trilogy know she has a gift for combining real and imagined characters, for making you see the horrors of war, and for knowing that people don’t stop having sex or being themselves because there’s a war on. This story, which revisits the characters of Barker’s last novel, Life Class, and is also set before and during WWI, features some of these traits, but, alas, without the fierce immediacy that made the trilogy so memorable. The titular Toby is painter Elinor Brooke’s brother; they’re close, problematically so; when news comes that he’s “missing, believed dead,” the need to know what happened takes over Elinor. In time, it reconnects her to Kit Neville, part of Toby’s team of medics, and Paul Tarrant, soldiers and war artists who were her fellow students, and, in Paul’s case, her former lover. Part mystery, part exploration of the varieties and vagaries of love and grief, part a description of British efforts to devise prosthetics and document the worst injuries, the book covers a lot of ground—perhaps too much. Readers may not feel the same urgency that Elinor does, and the eventual solution to the mystery, coming as it does amid all the other themes, doesn’t pack the necessary punch. Agent: Gillon Aitken, Aitken Alexander Associates.

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  • English

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