Restitution

By Maureen Duffy

The new novel from the author of the celebrated Londoners trilogy among many other novels and works of non-fiction.

Betony Falk is in her late 20s. Both her parents died when she was young, and she was brought up by her grandmother. With time on her hands between jobs she decides to find out more about her father’s death, which her grandmother has always surrounded in mystery. She finds no death certificate for him, only one for Herman Falk – no birth certificates for either. The death certificate hints at suicide. Betony confronts her grandmother with her findings and the latter confesses that the boy she brought up was a German Jewish refugee baby, a substitute for her own stillborn Henry. Her own sense of identity undermined, Betony sets out on a heartrending quest for the truth which takes her to Germany and into the past, only to discover that the more she finds out the less she knows who she is now. Spanning three centuries and seen from the viewpoints of Betony, her grandfather and Gill, her flatmate, RESTITUTION traces a family that fled as Jacobites from England, as Jews from Germany, and asks what relevance nationality and the past have for a young woman at the end of the twentieth century.

Format: Hardback
Release Date: 02 Jul 1998
Pages: 256
ISBN: 978-1-85702-466-1
A prolific poet and playwright, Maureen Duffy published her first novel, That’s How It Was, in 1962. She is the author of Wounds, Capital and Londoners: An Elegy (the Londoners trilogy) and has written biographies of Purcell and Aphra Behn.

Praise for the author: -

‘Maureen Duffy is one of the few British writers of fiction of real class’Financial Times -

‘An experienced, prolific novelist; nothing she writes can fail.’Daily Telegraph -

‘Maureen Duffy is one of Britain’s foremost writers.’Guardian -