
Still Missing

384pp
ISBN 9781903155783
Still Missing by Beth Gutcheon, b.1945, was ļ¬rst published in both America and Britain in 1981. It is a difļ¬cult book to categorise. Is it a novel? Is it a detective story? It is in fact written in the spare, direct style of a thriller. There is no way to deļ¬ne this extraordinary book except perhaps by quoting the opening section:
āYou could hardly get to age thirty-four without learning something about loss. By thirty-four youāre bound to have lost your Swiss Army knife, your best friend from fourth grade, your chance to be centre forward on the starting team, your hope of the Latin prize, quite a few of your illusions, and certainly, somewhere along the line, some signiļ¬cant love. Susan Selky had in fact recently lost an old battle, for her marriage to the man she was in love with, and with it, many ancillary dreams of more babies, and of holding his hand in the dark when they were old.
āIt may be that one loss helps to prepare you for the next, at least in developing a certain rueful sense of humour about things youāre too old to cry about. Thereās plenty of blather, some of it true, about turning pain into growth, using one blow to teach you resilience and to make you ready for the shock of the next one. But the greater truth is that life is not something you can go into training for. There was nothing in life that Susan Selky could have done to prepare for the breathtaking impact of losing her son.
āSusan Selky, bright, loyal, stubborn, shy. If you knew her professionally, you probably wouldnāt have guessed that whatever accomplished forays she made daily outside, she thought with relief of her narrow brick house on Fremont Street as if it were a shell. Inside, dumb and unguarded as a mollusk was the heart of life, her private days and nights with Alex.
āAlexander Graham Selky, Jr., age 6 & 3/4, a freelance spaceman. A small, sturdy child with a two-hundred-watt smile and a giggle like falling water, a child who saw Star Wars once with Mommy, twice with Daddy, and once again with TJ. Owner-trainer of Taxi, an oversized Shetland sheepdog.
āAlex Selky, going on seven, so eager to grow up, kissed his mother goodbye on their front steps on the hot bright morning of May 15 1980, and marched himself down the street on his way to the New Boston School of Back Bay, two blocks from his corner. He never arrived at school, and from the moment he turned the corner, he apparently disappeared from the face of the earth.ā
Still Missing was widely reviewed, was made into a ļ¬lm (Without a Trace), was a bestseller and is still in print in America: inexplicably, however, it had not been in print in the UK since the 1990s. This is what the New York Timesās reviewer wrote: āLove is hard enough to write about, but a parentās love for a child is almost inexpressible in its universality and in the uneventfulness of its nature under ordinary circumstances. When Alex disappears, Susan, his mother, doesnāt just lose a little boy. She loses the most essential part of herself, a piece of her own person-hood; without Alex she has no purpose and no future. Perhaps this can only be understood through a childās absence ā an unnatural cessation like a stopped heart. Given the novelās painful beginning I wondered how Miss Gutcheon could keep up such an intense emotional pitch. But keep it up she does, and, most impressively, without ever letting Susan slip from our sympathies by believing too much or too little in the likelihood of Alexās reappearance. She keeps believing, without caring what anybody else thinks, simply because nothing else is possible to her.
āSusan is strong and warm, the mother we all wish we had or could be. Her friends, relatives and ex-husband, Graham, Alexās father, show their true natures ā some not so pleasant ā as grief isolates and distorts her. Susan, obsessed, listens to every psychic, subjects her friends to lie-detector tests and embraces the media Ātelevision crews camped outside her Boston house ā with the clear tunnel vision of the mad: never mind that she is being exploited, because somewhere some reader or viewer might help her ļ¬nd her son.
āDesperate to ļ¬nd him, his mother begins a vigil that lasts for days, then weeks, then months. She is treated ļ¬rst as a tragic ļ¬gure, then as a grief-crazed hysteric, then as an unpleasant reminder of the bad fortune that can befall us all. Against all hope, despite false leads and the desertions of her friends and allies, she believes with all her heart that somehow, somewhere, Alex will be found alive.ā
The US Publisherās WeeklyĀ called the bookĀ āHaunting, harrowing and highly effective⦠a stunning shocker of an endingā¦It strings out the suspense to the almost unendurable.ā
Also available as a Persephone e-book.
Endpaper
A ribbed knit fabric made of durene, polyester and silk slub sprinkled with gold metallic, late 1970s.

384pp
ISBN 9781903155783
Still Missing by Beth Gutcheon, b.1945, was ļ¬rst published in both America and Britain in 1981. It is a difļ¬cult book to categorise. Is it a novel? Is it a detective story? It is in fact written in the spare, direct style of a thriller. There is no way to deļ¬ne this extraordinary book except perhaps by quoting the opening section:
āYou could hardly get to age thirty-four without learning something about loss. By thirty-four youāre bound to have lost your Swiss Army knife, your best friend from fourth grade, your chance to be centre forward on the starting team, your hope of the Latin prize, quite a few of your illusions, and certainly, somewhere along the line, some signiļ¬cant love. Susan Selky had in fact recently lost an old battle, for her marriage to the man she was in love with, and with it, many ancillary dreams of more babies, and of holding his hand in the dark when they were old.
āIt may be that one loss helps to prepare you for the next, at least in developing a certain rueful sense of humour about things youāre too old to cry about. Thereās plenty of blather, some of it true, about turning pain into growth, using one blow to teach you resilience and to make you ready for the shock of the next one. But the greater truth is that life is not something you can go into training for. There was nothing in life that Susan Selky could have done to prepare for the breathtaking impact of losing her son.
āSusan Selky, bright, loyal, stubborn, shy. If you knew her professionally, you probably wouldnāt have guessed that whatever accomplished forays she made daily outside, she thought with relief of her narrow brick house on Fremont Street as if it were a shell. Inside, dumb and unguarded as a mollusk was the heart of life, her private days and nights with Alex.
āAlexander Graham Selky, Jr., age 6 & 3/4, a freelance spaceman. A small, sturdy child with a two-hundred-watt smile and a giggle like falling water, a child who saw Star Wars once with Mommy, twice with Daddy, and once again with TJ. Owner-trainer of Taxi, an oversized Shetland sheepdog.
āAlex Selky, going on seven, so eager to grow up, kissed his mother goodbye on their front steps on the hot bright morning of May 15 1980, and marched himself down the street on his way to the New Boston School of Back Bay, two blocks from his corner. He never arrived at school, and from the moment he turned the corner, he apparently disappeared from the face of the earth.ā
Still Missing was widely reviewed, was made into a ļ¬lm (Without a Trace), was a bestseller and is still in print in America: inexplicably, however, it had not been in print in the UK since the 1990s. This is what the New York Timesās reviewer wrote: āLove is hard enough to write about, but a parentās love for a child is almost inexpressible in its universality and in the uneventfulness of its nature under ordinary circumstances. When Alex disappears, Susan, his mother, doesnāt just lose a little boy. She loses the most essential part of herself, a piece of her own person-hood; without Alex she has no purpose and no future. Perhaps this can only be understood through a childās absence ā an unnatural cessation like a stopped heart. Given the novelās painful beginning I wondered how Miss Gutcheon could keep up such an intense emotional pitch. But keep it up she does, and, most impressively, without ever letting Susan slip from our sympathies by believing too much or too little in the likelihood of Alexās reappearance. She keeps believing, without caring what anybody else thinks, simply because nothing else is possible to her.
āSusan is strong and warm, the mother we all wish we had or could be. Her friends, relatives and ex-husband, Graham, Alexās father, show their true natures ā some not so pleasant ā as grief isolates and distorts her. Susan, obsessed, listens to every psychic, subjects her friends to lie-detector tests and embraces the media Ātelevision crews camped outside her Boston house ā with the clear tunnel vision of the mad: never mind that she is being exploited, because somewhere some reader or viewer might help her ļ¬nd her son.
āDesperate to ļ¬nd him, his mother begins a vigil that lasts for days, then weeks, then months. She is treated ļ¬rst as a tragic ļ¬gure, then as a grief-crazed hysteric, then as an unpleasant reminder of the bad fortune that can befall us all. Against all hope, despite false leads and the desertions of her friends and allies, she believes with all her heart that somehow, somewhere, Alex will be found alive.ā
The US Publisherās WeeklyĀ called the bookĀ āHaunting, harrowing and highly effective⦠a stunning shocker of an endingā¦It strings out the suspense to the almost unendurable.ā
Also available as a Persephone e-book.
Endpaper
A ribbed knit fabric made of durene, polyester and silk slub sprinkled with gold metallic, late 1970s.
Description

384pp
ISBN 9781903155783
Still Missing by Beth Gutcheon, b.1945, was ļ¬rst published in both America and Britain in 1981. It is a difļ¬cult book to categorise. Is it a novel? Is it a detective story? It is in fact written in the spare, direct style of a thriller. There is no way to deļ¬ne this extraordinary book except perhaps by quoting the opening section:
āYou could hardly get to age thirty-four without learning something about loss. By thirty-four youāre bound to have lost your Swiss Army knife, your best friend from fourth grade, your chance to be centre forward on the starting team, your hope of the Latin prize, quite a few of your illusions, and certainly, somewhere along the line, some signiļ¬cant love. Susan Selky had in fact recently lost an old battle, for her marriage to the man she was in love with, and with it, many ancillary dreams of more babies, and of holding his hand in the dark when they were old.
āIt may be that one loss helps to prepare you for the next, at least in developing a certain rueful sense of humour about things youāre too old to cry about. Thereās plenty of blather, some of it true, about turning pain into growth, using one blow to teach you resilience and to make you ready for the shock of the next one. But the greater truth is that life is not something you can go into training for. There was nothing in life that Susan Selky could have done to prepare for the breathtaking impact of losing her son.
āSusan Selky, bright, loyal, stubborn, shy. If you knew her professionally, you probably wouldnāt have guessed that whatever accomplished forays she made daily outside, she thought with relief of her narrow brick house on Fremont Street as if it were a shell. Inside, dumb and unguarded as a mollusk was the heart of life, her private days and nights with Alex.
āAlexander Graham Selky, Jr., age 6 & 3/4, a freelance spaceman. A small, sturdy child with a two-hundred-watt smile and a giggle like falling water, a child who saw Star Wars once with Mommy, twice with Daddy, and once again with TJ. Owner-trainer of Taxi, an oversized Shetland sheepdog.
āAlex Selky, going on seven, so eager to grow up, kissed his mother goodbye on their front steps on the hot bright morning of May 15 1980, and marched himself down the street on his way to the New Boston School of Back Bay, two blocks from his corner. He never arrived at school, and from the moment he turned the corner, he apparently disappeared from the face of the earth.ā
Still Missing was widely reviewed, was made into a ļ¬lm (Without a Trace), was a bestseller and is still in print in America: inexplicably, however, it had not been in print in the UK since the 1990s. This is what the New York Timesās reviewer wrote: āLove is hard enough to write about, but a parentās love for a child is almost inexpressible in its universality and in the uneventfulness of its nature under ordinary circumstances. When Alex disappears, Susan, his mother, doesnāt just lose a little boy. She loses the most essential part of herself, a piece of her own person-hood; without Alex she has no purpose and no future. Perhaps this can only be understood through a childās absence ā an unnatural cessation like a stopped heart. Given the novelās painful beginning I wondered how Miss Gutcheon could keep up such an intense emotional pitch. But keep it up she does, and, most impressively, without ever letting Susan slip from our sympathies by believing too much or too little in the likelihood of Alexās reappearance. She keeps believing, without caring what anybody else thinks, simply because nothing else is possible to her.
āSusan is strong and warm, the mother we all wish we had or could be. Her friends, relatives and ex-husband, Graham, Alexās father, show their true natures ā some not so pleasant ā as grief isolates and distorts her. Susan, obsessed, listens to every psychic, subjects her friends to lie-detector tests and embraces the media Ātelevision crews camped outside her Boston house ā with the clear tunnel vision of the mad: never mind that she is being exploited, because somewhere some reader or viewer might help her ļ¬nd her son.
āDesperate to ļ¬nd him, his mother begins a vigil that lasts for days, then weeks, then months. She is treated ļ¬rst as a tragic ļ¬gure, then as a grief-crazed hysteric, then as an unpleasant reminder of the bad fortune that can befall us all. Against all hope, despite false leads and the desertions of her friends and allies, she believes with all her heart that somehow, somewhere, Alex will be found alive.ā
The US Publisherās WeeklyĀ called the bookĀ āHaunting, harrowing and highly effective⦠a stunning shocker of an endingā¦It strings out the suspense to the almost unendurable.ā
Also available as a Persephone e-book.
Endpaper
A ribbed knit fabric made of durene, polyester and silk slub sprinkled with gold metallic, late 1970s.













