
The Amnesia Clinic
James Scudamore
Anti, a quiet English boy living in Quito, Ecuador, strikes up a friendship with flamboyant classmate Fabián, who is everything Anti isn't: handsome, athletic and popular. What's more, he lives with his rakish Uncle Suarez, while Anti is stuck in the dull ex-pat world inhabited by his parents.
Suarez, a storyteller par excellence, infects the boys with his passion for outlandish tales, and before long their relationship becomes one conducted entirely through the telling of tales. One subject, however, is taboo: Fabián's parents. But when details surrounding their disappearance begin to emerge, Anti decides to console his friend with a story suggesting that Fabián's mother may be living at a bizarre hospital on the coast for patients with memory loss. With confused emotions and reality losing its tenuous grip, the boys embark on a quixotic voyage across Ecuador in search of an 'Amnesia Clinic' that may, or may not exist.
The Amnesia Clinic won the Somerset Maugham Award and was shortlisted for the Costa First Novel Award, the Commonwealth Writers’ Prize and the Dylan Thomas Prize.
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About James Scudamore
Reviews for The Amnesia Clinic
Herald
Scudamore has produced a clever, witty and believable debut. A fantastic read
Caroline Gibb
Scotsman
A polished debut... Turns the tables on both characters and readers as imagination segues into dangerous reality
Guardian
Scudamore has fun blurring the edges of truth and fiction, creating fantastic and colourful stories within stories
Laurence Phelan
Independent on Sunday
Bewitching...Highly recommended. Scudamore has talent to burn
Matt Thorne
Sunday Telegraph
A wonderful debut - witty, polished, fluent and effortlessly entertaining
Hilary Mantel A nostalgic, compelling adventure laced with black humour
Time Out
A compulsively readable novel about the seductiveness of storytelling... Both his characters and the electrifying manner in which Scudamore writes about Ecuador demonstrate the appeal as well as the danger of any fabulist's capacity for wonder
Literary Review