About This Book
A narrator describes how an arresting child seen on a railway journey set him on a prolonged inquiry into an unusual life. He details early ties with a local man called Ginger Stott and then charts the boy's precarious childhood—departure from home, paternal abandonment, help from benefactors, intense self-education, examinations, and confrontations with teachers and critics. Later sections follow the narrator's growing fascination, a period of intellectual subjection to the boy, his eventual release, and the moral and psychological implications of that relationship. Throughout, reflections on mystery, learning, and the limits of understanding frame how an extraordinary mind affects individuals and community.
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