Child Buyer

Child Buyer

by John Hersey
©1960, Item: 92874
Hardcover, 260 pages
Not in stock

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An imaginary, utterly absorbing record of the investigations of the Committee on Education, Welfare, and Public Morality of an unnamed state senate into the activities of Mr. Wissey Jones, who has come to the town of Pequot on what he says is urgent defense business.

The hearings develop the suspense of a bizarre trial. It soon becomes clear that Mr. Jones buys for his corporation children of a certain sort, and that he is eager to acquire a ten-year-old named Barry Rudd, who manifests the breathtaking, prickly, sometimes obnoxious, but also deeply moving precocity of a potential genius. The dramatic conflicts exposed during the hearings revolve around the questions of exactly why Mr. Jones's company buys children, and whether he will succeed in buying Barry.

The Child Buyer is a biting commentary on some aspects of American education, on the uses of high intelligence, and on the means of defending democracy. Mr. Hersey makes fine use of the classical weapons of satire-humor and high spirits, sweet dream and nightmare, grotesqueness in the heart of normalcy—to attack not any single theory of education, but the notions that education can be an exact science; that superior minds can be set free by a national crash program; that children can be regarded as weapons; and that talent can be processed and stored for profit and defense. Although these extraordinary hearings end in a kind of horror, involving the slide into corruption or rascality or apathy of almost everyone connected with them, nevertheless the book leaves in the reader's mind a powerful affirmation—a case for individuality, freedom of thought, integrity, faith in the young, and, above all, a better understanding of human needs in a darkling world.

A NOTE ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

JOHN HERSEY was born in Tientsin, China, in 1914 and lived there until 1925, when his family returned to the United States. He was graduated from Yale in 1936 and then attended Clare College, Cambridge, for a year; upon his return from England he was private secretary to Sinclair Lewis during a summer. His first novel, A Bell for Adano, won the Pulitzer Prize in 1945. Since 1947 he has devoted his time to fiction and has written The Wall (1950), The Marmot Drive (1953), A Single Pebble (1956), The War Lover (1959), and The Child Buyer (1960).

Mr. Hersey brought to The Child Buyer more than a decade of interest in American public education. He has been a member of a local school board and of a town school-study committee; chairman of a state committee on the problems of gifted children; member of the National Citizens' Commission on the Public Schools; delegate to the White House Conference on Education; member of the National Citizens' Council for Better Schools; and consultant to the Fund for the Advancement of Education.

September 1960

JACKET DESIGN BY GUY FLEMING

from the dust jacket

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