Top

We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

The Missing

On sale

21st January 2010

Price: £9.99

Select a format

Selected: Paperback / ISBN-13: 9780340977958

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

‘Remarkable…a rip-roaring adventure novel with a true depth of feeling’ Sunday Times

‘A joy to read’ Herald

The First World War ended the day Sam Simoneaux’s regiment reached France, but he saw more than enough of its ravages. Returning to New Orleans, he determines to put mayhem and destruction behind him, and to make a fresh start with his wife. But when a little girl is abducted on his watch at a department store, he has no choice but to help find her.

Steeped in the langorous rhythms and music of Prohibition-era Louisiana, The Missing vividly evokes a ragged frontier nation where violence is normal and the law easy to dodge. Relentlessly suspenseful and profoundly affecting, this is an enthralling tale of vengeance, conscience and redemption by an exceptional writer.

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

Stephen Amidon, <i>Sunday Times</i>
'Remarkable...a rip-roaring adventure novel with a true depth of feeling'
James Urquhart, <i>Independent</i>
A beautifully written, enthralling saga . . . a compelling novel
Andrew Rosenheim, <i>The Times</i>
Gautreaux writes action-packed novels that stand out for the extraordinary calibre of their prose
Alan Warner, <i>Guardian</i>
Has the impact of a book twice its length . . . a dramatic, theatrical meditation on law and lawlessness
Barclay McBain, <i>Herald</i>
Tim Gautreaux's redemptive novel is a joy to read
Heather Thompson, <i>Sunday Telegraph</i>
Gautreaux brings a long-gone era to life in lush, fresh detail . . . this novel about the intricacies of the human heart has a great, beating one of its own. Life may be harsh and fleeting, but the missing are still missed.
Tom Payne, <i>Daily Telegraph</i>
Tim Gautreaux has managed to write a fine novel about a child's abduction without making it too upsetting. This isn't to say that the book is lightweight; nor does it duck the fear and trauma of the events it narrates. It has all the insight and metaphors you could wish for, but you end up zipping through it . . . impressively thrilling, and pleasingly complete
John Dugdale, <i>Literary Review</i>
Gautreaux writes with sustained grace and creates memorable characters . . . What really sets THE MISSING apart, though, is his remarkable ability to realise the period . . . a rare and rather uncanny achievement: a novel about the South in the early Twenties that reads as though it was actually written there and then
Claire Prentice, <i>Scotsman</i>
Full of vivid evocations of the sights, sounds and smells of the South. As Simoneaux pursues his morally driven detective mission the scent of the steaming mud of the cypress swamps and the sound of 1920s New Orleans jazz rise off the page