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Children's and Young Adult Fiction

Bleak vision

Slaughterboy by Odo Hirsch

by Stephanie Trigg
May 2005, no. 271

Slaughterboy by Odo Hirsch

Allen & Unwin, $16.95 pb, 317 pp

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Here is a kind of social experiment in fiction. Take the lowest, most abject starting point for a human life. Give the child no advantages, home or family; provide it with no regular food or care; subject it to the privations of a society with no welfare system; deprive it of any educational, emotional or spiritual training; and then, when it finally finds an occupation, make it the lowest, most socially disadvantaged and despised. And then see what kind of person it turns out to be. Oh, and set the whole thing in the Middle Ages, which, as everyone knows, was the most brutal, depraved, disease- and poverty-ridden era in Western history.

 


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Slaughterboy by Odo Hirsch

Allen & Unwin, $16.95 pb, 317 pp

ABR receives a commission on items purchased through this link. All ABR reviews are fully independent.


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