Lost Children Archive: Unabridged edition

By Valeria Luiselli, Read by Valeria Luiselli and Kivlighan de Montebello

WINNER OF THE DUBLIN LITERARY AWARD AND THE RATHBONES FOLIO PRIZE

LONGLISTED FOR THE BOOKER PRIZE AND THE WOMEN’S PRIZE

The moving, powerful and urgent English-language debut from one of the brightest young stars in world literature

Suppose you and Pa were gone, and we were lost. What would happen then?

A family in New York packs the car and sets out on a road trip. A mother, a father, a boy and a girl, they head south west, to the Apacheria, the regions of the US which used to be Mexico. They drive for hours through desert and mountains. They stop at diners when they’re hungry and sleep in motels when it gets dark. The little girl tells surreal knock knock jokes and makes them all laugh. The little boy educates them all and corrects them when they’re wrong. The mother and the father are barely speaking to each other.

Meanwhile, thousands of children are journeying north, travelling to the US border from Central America and Mexico. A grandmother or aunt has packed a backpack for them, putting in a bible, one toy, some clean underwear. They have been met by a coyote: a man who speaks to them roughly and frightens them. They cross a river on rubber tubing and walk for days, saving whatever food and water they can. Then they climb to the top of a train and travel precariously in the open container on top. Not all of them will make it to the border.

In a breath-taking feat of literary virtuosity, Lost Children Archive intertwines these two journeys to create a masterful novel full of echoes and reflections – a moving, powerful, urgent story about what it is to be human in an inhuman world.

Format: Audio-Book
Release Date: 12 Feb 2019
Pages: None
ISBN: 978-0-00-829006-1
Detailed Edition: Unabridged edition
Valeria Luiselli was born in Mexico City in 1983. She is the author of the novels Faces in the Crowd and The Story of My Teeth, which won the 2016 LA Times Book Prize for Fiction; the essay collection Sidewalks; and Tell Me How It Ends, an essay about the situation faced by children arriving at the US-Mexico border without papers. Lost Children Archive is her first novel written in English.

'Fascinating, haunting, poetic' Sunday Times -

”'A mould-breaking new classic … The novel truly becomes novel again in her hands - electric, elastic, alluring, new” - New York Times

”'Daring, wholly original, brilliant … a twist on the great American road trip novel, a book about alienation that chronicles fractures, divides, and estrangement” - NPR

”'Timely and poignant” - Vogue

”'A wonderfully subtle story in which the experience of migrant children is filtered through the delicate, funny, effortlessly poetic account of a family’s road trip from New York to the Mexican border” - Guardian

‘Roving and beautiful … a searing indictment of America’s border policy' Daily Mail -

”'Powerful and urgent” - Stylist