Claire Kohda Hazelton 

Devotion by Louisa Young review – a formative tale of family battles

Two siblings grow up surrounded by war in an expertly woven story of loyalty
  
  

Benito Mussolini, whose rise forms part of the backdrop to Louisa Young’s new novel.
Benito Mussolini, whose rise forms part of the backdrop to Louisa Young’s new novel. Photograph: Topical Press Agency/Getty Images

This accomplished sequel to Young’s bestselling My Dear, I Wanted to Tell You and The Heroes’ Welcome has Tom and Kitty Locke growing up during the two decades of peace between the first and second world wars. The first war shaped their family: their mother, dead; their father, Peter, crippled by post-traumatic stress disorder. They are brought up by Riley, who is disfigured (Tom speaks of the “jawbone Riley had left in France”), and Nadine. Devotion is, in essence, a Bildungsroman – Tom and Kitty learn to reflect on their family’s experience of war and on the coming of another, they form political and personal identities, and they fall in love – Tom with Nenna, the daughter of Nadine’s brother, Aldo, a founding member of Italian fascism. Young expertly weaves questions of politics, race and loyalty into the Locke family’s narrative; when Mussolini joins forces with Hitler, Aldo’s unfaltering devotion to Mussolini becomes a threat to the entire family.

Devotion is published by HarperCollins (£14.99). Click here to buy it for £11.99

 

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