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Sunday's Children

Published
Apr 1994
Main Genre
General Fiction General Fiction
Pages
153

About This Book

Pu Bergman is eight years old when Mother rents Pastor Dahlberg's ramshackle house for the summer. Pu is a Sunday's child—one said to be endowed with special gifts of sensitivity, clairvoyance, and the ability to see ghosts.
As the novel opens, Pu's heart is full of anticipation as he goes to the train station to greet his father. When Father arrives, he is strangely distant, melancholy, and severe. Over the next twenty-four hours, Pu's world is marked indelibly. In beautifully realized set pieces that reveal the Bergman family landscape and culminate in a train trip Pu and his father take together, Pu encounters death and the infirmities of aging, is humiliated by his terrorizing older brother, dwells on ghost stories the servants tell, and witnesses the painful arguments between his parents.

A series of "flashbacks to the future" enriches our understanding of the relationship between man and boy, as a much older Ingmar Bergman visits his ill and dying father, bringing the novel full circle. In his review of the film made from Sunday's Children, Vincent Canby called the story "gorgeous, richly poignant . . . Not since Wild Strawberries has Mr. Bergman dealt with time in a way that is simultaneously quite so limpid and so mysterious."

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Paperback

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Apr 1995 Arcade Publishing ISBN 1559702923
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Trade Paperback
Apr 2011 Arcade Publishing ISBN 1611452333
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Nov 2013 Arcade Publishing ISBN 1611458633
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Nov 2018 Vintage (UK) ISBN 1784873896
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Hardcover

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Hardcover
Mar 1994 Arcade Publishing ISBN 1559702443
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eBook

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Oct 2011 Arcade Publishing ISBN B005UK86U6
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Oct 2011 Skyhorse Publishing ISBN 1628721839
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