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Rumpelstiltskin retold: Alive in the Merciful Country, by A.L. Kennedy, reviewed

A group of idealistic activists is betrayed by a charismatic newcomer who dazzles with skill and charm – and gets away with murder. Repeatedly

Lee Langley
Rumpelstiltskin at the spinning wheel. (Pen-and-ink wash, 19th-century Germany). Sepia Times/Universal Images Group via Getty Images
EXPLORE THE ISSUE 04 January 2025
issue 04 January 2025

The narrator of Alive in the Merciful Country is a woman weighed down by past trauma ‘like a bag full of broken kaleidoscopes’. Anna is a teacher steering her nine-year-old pupils through the 2020 lockdown while coping with life as the single mother of a troubled teenage boy, trying to rebuild trust after a shattering betrayal: ‘I didn’t ask to be in a spy scenario, or an action scenario, or a political thriller, but I recurringly have been.’

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