Uniquely imagined and vividly evoked, André Alexis's prize-winning novel
chronicles the childhood - or perhaps the loss of childhood - of Thomas
MacMillan, who sets out to piece together the early years of his life.
Raised in a Southern Ontario town in the '50s and '60s, Thomas is
abandoned to the care of his eccentric Trinidadian grandmother. Then, at
ten, his mother, Katarina, reclaims him, taking him to Ottawa and to the
once-splendid Victorian home of Henry Wing, a gentle conjurer whose love
of science and the imagination becomes an important legacy. But is he
Thomas's father? Moving and wryly humorous, Childhood tells the story
of a man's quest for what is lost, bringing him closer to the truth
about himself.