The Boy in the Field: A Novel

A New York Times Notable Book of the Year | An O Magazine Best Book of the Year

The New York Times bestselling author of The Flight of Gemma Hardy delivers another “luminous, unforgettable, and perfectly rendered” (Dennis Lehane) novel—a poignant and probing psychological drama that follows the lives of three siblings in the wake of a violent crime.

One September afternoon in 1999, teenagers Matthew, Zoe, and Duncan Lang are walking home from school when they discover a boy lying in a field, bloody and unconscious. Thanks to their intervention, the boy’s life is saved. In the aftermath, all three siblings are irrevocably changed. 

Matthew, the oldest, becomes obsessed with tracking down the assailant, secretly searching the local town with the victim’s brother. Zoe wanders the streets of Oxford, looking at men, and one of them, a visiting American graduate student, looks back. Duncan, the youngest, who has seldom thought about being adopted, suddenly decides he wants to find his birth mother. Overshadowing all three is the awareness that something is amiss in their parents’ marriage. Over the course of the autumn, as each of the siblings confronts the complications and contradictions of their approaching adulthood, they find themselves at once drawn together and driven apart.

Written with the deceptive simplicity and power of a fable, The Boy in the Field showcases Margot Livesey’s unmatched ability to “tell her tale masterfully, with intelligence, tenderness, and a shrewd understanding of all our mercurial human impulses” (Lily King, author of Euphoria).

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Published Jul 27, 2021

272 pages

Average rating: 7.81

16 RATINGS

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Community Reviews

thenextgoodbook
Sep 04, 2025
10/10 stars
thenextgoodbook.com
The Boy in the Field by Margot Livesey
254 pages

What’s it about?
In the fall of 1999 three teenage siblings are walking home from school when they discover a boy lying in a field. He is unconscious and bleeding. Help is called and the boy survives. All three siblings are forever changed by this experience.

What did it make me think about?
I thought I was picking up a mystery, but this book turned out to be so much more. How have I never read a book written by Margot Livesey? The writing reminds me a little of Sigrid Nunez. It's like the voices of the characters are so low you really need to pay attention.

Should I read it?
This was such a quiet novel with so much to say. It was a mystery about what happened to that boy in the field, but it was more about the mystery of the human mind. "I don't think we'll ever finish discussing ideas of the self, or the problem of evil."

Quote-
"People talk about locked-room mysteries, but the ultimate locked room is another person's brain."

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