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The Matchbox Girl
Lose yourself in this autumn's most captivating historical novel
The Matchbox Girl
Lose yourself in this autumn's most captivating historical novel
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Description
From the multi-award-winning author – a beautiful, stunningly ambitious novel telling the story of a young girl's battle for survival and search for the truth in occupied Vienna
'A shimmering masterwork' Alice Austen
'An extraordinary novel about resilience' Amanda Craig
'A mesmerising tapestry woven across history' Gina Rippon
'Gripping and profound. A masterful work of rare complexity that lingers and haunts' Christine Leunens
Adelheid Brunner does not speak. She writes and draws instead and her ambition is to own one thousand matchboxes. Her grandmother cannot make sense of this, but Adelheid will stop at nothing to achieve her dream. She makes herself invisible, hiding in cupboards with her pet rat, Franz Joseph, listening in on conversations she can't fully comprehend.
Then she meets Dr Asperger, a man who lets children play all day and who recognises the importance of matchboxes. He invites Adelheid to come and live at the Vienna paediatric clinic, where she and other children like herself will live under observation.
But the date is 1938 and the place is Vienna – a city of political instability, a place of increasing fear and violence. When the Nazis march into the city, a new world is created and difficult choices must be made.
Why are the clinic's children disappearing, and where do they go? Adelheid starts to suspect that some of Dr Asperger's games are played for the highest stakes. In order to survive, she must play a game whose rules she cannot yet understand.
Triumphant and tragic, soulful and spirited, The Matchbox Girl is a burningly brilliant book – that brings the stories of a generation of lost children into the light.
'A vividly imagined story told with real drive and heart' Rachel Seiffert
'Unique and profoundly human' Emma Darwin
'One of the most charismatic and companionable narrators I've ever come across' Toby Litt
'The sheer brilliance of Alice Jolly's writing stopped me in my tracks, stole my breath' Angela Findlay
'An important, powerful book, so real I couldn't put it down' Kathleen Jones
Product details
Published | 06 Nov 2025 |
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Format | Hardback |
Edition | 1st |
Extent | 416 |
ISBN | 9781526681034 |
Imprint | Bloomsbury Publishing |
Dimensions | 234 x 153 mm |
Publisher | Bloomsbury Publishing |
About the contributors
Reviews
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A shimmering masterwork written from the perspective of a wholly original heroine ... Adelheid doesn't speak but her keen and captivating observations reveal a wartime Vienna that is a hall of mirrors: a place of beauty, terror, and deceitful compromises. You will read to the end with the fervent hope that the alchemy of circumstance can save Adelheid from the fate of so many other children like her
Alice Austen, author of 33 Place Brugmann
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A vividly imagined story told with real drive and heart
Rachel Seiffert
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Gripping and profound. A masterful work of rare complexity that lingers and haunts
Christine Leunens
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A couple of pages is all it took for me to fall completely under the sway of one of the most charismatic and companionable narrators I've ever come across. Adelheid Brunner, The Matchbox Girl, is a charming, anguished and urgent storyteller who whirls us away on an astonishing personal, generational and psychological adventure through the hidden worlds of war-threatened and war-wracked Vienna. This is a very special book
Toby Litt
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Alice Jolly is a writer of originality, passion and insight into the suffering of the most vulnerable ... This will join classics like Plath's The Bell Jar and Toni Morrison's Beloved as an extraordinary novel about resilience
Amanda Craig
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The sheer brilliance of Alice Jolly's writing stopped me in my tracks, stole my breath. Her extensive research and incisive imagination weave a narrative as rich as it is haunting ... This is a courageous, important, stunning and timely book ... It's the kind of novel that doesn't just illuminate the past, but gently and insistently asks us to re-examine the present - and ourselves
Angela Findlay