Lois Duncan

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They Never Came Home

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The critic characterizes Lois Duncan's They Never Came Home as a "shallow, slick, sick" narrative centered on the morally corrupt protagonist Larry, who schemes and manipulates his way into presumed freedom, only to face poetic justice in a tale marked by themes of deception, survival, and retribution.

Selfish, smooth-dressing, pot-pushing Larry [protagonist of They Never Came Home], balking at discipline from Dad, decides that he can vanish (presumed dead) with the $2000 he's embezzled from his dope ring by pushing handy Dan off a cliff during their camping trip. Dan is sturdy (in spirit and body) and survives the fall with only a case of amnesia…. [Masterminded] by Larry, the two (as brothers Lance and Dave) reach the California coast where recuperating "Dave" works six days a week while "Lance" makes hay with pot. When Dan learns who he is and how he's been had, his revulsion and refusal to play along cause Larry to lunge at him, but this time it's Larry who goes over the balcony rail…. There'll be no embarrassing questions: in terms of the story, Larry's an enemy of society, fair game for extermination. Shallow, slick, sick.

A review of "They Never Came Home," in Kirkus Reviews (copyright © 1969 The Kirkus Service, Inc.), Vol. XXXVII, No. 5, March 1, 1969, p. 245.

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