In Pursuit of Love: The Search for Victor Hugo's Daughter
By (Author) Mark Bostridge
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Bloomsbury Continuum
3rd September 2024
6th June 2024
United Kingdom
General
Non Fiction
848.709
Hardback
288
Width 153mm, Height 234mm
Its 1863. The daughter of the most famous writer in the world, Victor Hugo, suddenly leaves her familys home on the Channel Islands bound for Nova Scotia. She is in pursuit of a young British soldier, with whom she is desperately in love, but who has rejected her. Eight years later, after stalking him to the Caribbean, where hes stationed with the army, Adle Hugo is brought back to Paris by a benevolent former slave woman who has taken pity on her. She is admitted to an asylum where she dies decades later, rich from the inheritance of the rights to her fathers books. This story of hopeless love has inspired writers, composers, and a well-known film by Franois Truffaut. Yet much about Adle Hugos tragic life has remained shrouded in mystery not least the true character and identity of the soldier who ultimately contributed to her undoing. Mark Bostridge has been obsessed by Adles story for his entire adult life. Now he sets out in pursuit of the truth about her, travelling halfway across the world, acting as sleuth and tracking down the descendants of the soldier she loved. In so doing he recognises the source of his fascination with the aspects of Adles life that reflect and parallel his own. The result is a moving book about the pain of loving too much and of parents loving too little; about the ways in which we are haunted by the dead; and about our insatiable appetite for others peoples stories which possess us and invade our own lives. In Pursuit of Love is part memoir and part travelogue, as well as an invigorating new approach to the writing of biography.
Its the saddest story ever told - and told so beautifully that you wish it would never end. The authors search for the truth about Victor Hugos daughter carries him across oceans and into the darkest corners of his own past. Its an unforgettable journey. * Ferdinand Mount, author of Kiss Myself Goodbye *
A haunting and utterly engrossing book not just a brilliant study of Adele Hugos obsessive and unrequited love, but full of revelations about the biographer himself, as he pursues the truth about her life, and finds in the process many parallel truths about his own. * Claire Harman, author of Charlotte Bront: A Fiery Heart *
Profound, shattering, and utterly immersive. * Frances Wilson, author of Burning Man: The Ascent of DH Lawrence *
This excavation of a buried woman covered by the sands of time, hearsay, rumours that attach to celebrity, and her own misinformation sifts the very practice of biography. As a strange story of an obsession comes to light, Bostridge questions our reliance on documentation and challenges the illusion of objectivity with the biographers own obsessiveness as he finds touching parallels in his own life that bring him closer to elusive truth. * Lyndall Gordon, author of The Hyacinth Girl: T. S. Eliot's Hidden Muse *
Mark Bostridge won the Gladstone Memorial Prize at Oxford University. He worked for the politician Shirley Williams and at the BBC before becoming a full-time writer. His books include the highly acclaimed biographies, Vera Brittain: A Life, shortlisted for the Whitbread Biography Prize, the NCR non-fiction Award, and the Fawcett Prize; and Florence Nightingale: The Woman and her Legend, winner of the 2009 Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography. He has written widely for national newspapers and journals, and appeared on television and radio. He was the consultant on a film version of Vera Brittain's Testament of Youth, which was produced by Heyday for BBC Films and was released in January 2015.