From the adept Adams (Games of the Strong, etc.), a tale of transformation: A nervous, clingy and neglected child manages...

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LONGLEG

From the adept Adams (Games of the Strong, etc.), a tale of transformation: A nervous, clingy and neglected child manages against all odds, like a plant that takes root on a bomb-site, to grow up into a young man of character--even, in a way, the adventurer of his early daydreams. The story opens promisingly: ""It took William Badger some time to understand that he was going to be left behind, deliberately abandoned....His mother had simply asked if he would like a nice seaside holiday, and he had said yes."" William Badger, a lonely child, wishes at Christmas for a mannequin, a replica of himself to be his friend. He'd call it Longleg. Instead he gets a book about the underworld, the demimonde, and accidents in mines. Soon after, his mother does abandon him in a seaside boardinghouse. Coincidentally, the proprietress is a woman with whom he and his mother used to share a bomb shelter in London. The next section begins in adulthood, also underground on a spelunking expedition. On a visit home, while trying to fend off his mother's attack with an axe, William is arrested--and flees the country. In Belgium, working as a secretary, he loses his virginity to a student revolutionary. In London, as a bus driver, he falls in love with an American tour guide. Throughout, he wonders why his mother abandoned him. Finally, back in Australia, William learns what has already been revealed to us early on: ""There was a wife already....She had a boy, too."" Apparently, the boy resembled William closely--so there was an actual ""Longleg""--no surprise to the reader. Luckily, what matters here is not the destination but the adventures along the way with obsessive William, his hoard of chocolates, and, ultimately, his hoard of memories. Despite too many coincidences and predictable revelations, this is probably Adams's most successful book--thanks to brisk, vivid prose, and the sort of bumbling yet valiant hero that readers love to root for.

Pub Date: July 10, 1992

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 339

Publisher: Cane Hill--dist. by InBook

Review Posted Online: N/A

Kirkus Reviews Issue: June 15, 1992

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