

John Connolly
The Book Of Lost Things
This book is dedicated to an adult, Jennifer Ridyard,
and to Cameron and Alistair Ridyard, who will be
adults all too soon.
For in every adult dwells the child that was, and in
every child lies the adult that will be.
Deeper meaning resides in the fairy tales
told to me in my childhood than in the
truth that is taught by life.
– FRIEDRICH SCHILLER (1759-1805)
Everything you can imagine is real.
– PABLO PICASSO (1881-1973)
I Of All That Was Found and All That Was Lost
ONCE UPON A TIME -for that is how all stories should begin-there was a boy who lost his mother.
He had, in truth, been losing her for a very long time.
The disease that was killing her was a creeping, cowardly thing, a sickness that ate away at her from the inside, slowly consuming the light within, so that her eyes grew a little less bright with each passing day, and her skin a little more pale.
And as she was stolen away from him, piece by piece, the boy became more and more afraid of finally losing her entirely. He wanted her to stay. He had no brothers and no sisters, and while he loved his father, it would be true to say that he loved his mother more. He could not bear to think of a life without her.
The boy, whose name was David, did everything that he could to keep his mother alive. He prayed. He tried to be good, so that she would not be punished for his mistakes. He padded around the house as quietly as he was able, and kept his voice down when he was playing war games with his toy soldiers. He created a routine, and he tried to keep to that routine as closely as possible, because he believed in part that his mother’s fate was linked to the actions he performed.
