---
product_id: 102773545
title: "Little: A Novel"
price: "₱955"
currency: PHP
in_stock: true
reviews_count: 8
url: https://www.desertcart.ph/products/102773545-little-a-novel
store_origin: PH
region: Philippines
---

# Little: A Novel

**Price:** ₱955
**Availability:** ✅ In Stock

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- **What is this?** Little: A Novel
- **How much does it cost?** ₱955 with free shipping
- **Is it available?** Yes, in stock and ready to ship
- **Where can I buy it?** [www.desertcart.ph](https://www.desertcart.ph/products/102773545-little-a-novel)

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## Description

Review: Compelling and UNique - What an entertaining, imaginative novel! Carey's narrator/protagonist is Marie Grosholtz,better known today as Madame Toussaud. The story begins as Marie, an unattractive, tiny seven-year old who loves to draw, describes her parents. Marie embellishes the pages of her tale with pencil drawings: when she describes her mother's large nose (which Marie inherited) and her father's upwards-thrust jaw (which she also inherited), she draws these body parts in the margins. Little Marie has two treasured belongings: a faceless doll that her mother made and her father's silver jawbone (a soldier, he lost the original in a battle). When double tragedies befall the family, Marie becomes apprenticed to Dr. Curtius, a reclusive anatomist whose job it is to make wax replicas of human organs for the local hospital's training purposes. Together, they begin the business of taking wax impressions of heads. As things prosper, they are convinced that they must move to Paris, where famous heads are more plentiful. The two take lodging with a tailor's widow and her odd (perhaps autistic) son. When the business prospers, they purchase The Monkey House, the former site of a simian exhibition, and it soon becomes the rage for the rich, famous, and powerful to have their heads cast in wax. This is only the beginning, but I don't want to give too much away. [Little] (the derogatory nickname she is given by the widow) is not only a fictional biography of Marie, it is her first-person account of the court of Louis XVI and of the French Revolution--and a fascinating account it is. From Versailles to the streets of Paris to prison, Marie takes us along on a journey that is both glorious and harrowing, and her encounters with a wide cast of characters, from a feral boy to the king himself to Napoleon, opening a window onto the Reign of Terror and beyond. Throughout, her account is accompanied by her marginal drawings, making it all the more believable that this is Marie's own journal. However great the events and personages, we never forget that this is, indeed, her story. Carey has given his protagonist a unique viewpoint into history and a compelling voice. I loved Marie, and I loved her story of hardships, successes, and survival. I will definitely be looking for other works by this author.
Review: A Fascinating Gem of a Read - This is why I love book club: I would not have picked up this book on my own, but so glad I read it. It was not my typical jam and sounded a bit strange…and boy was it strange – an oddity – BUT I couldn’t stop turning the page. You really want to know what happens to all these characters; although I hated me some Widow Picot, what a wicked character. I was a bit fascinated by it all. It is loosely, and I mean loosely, based on the life of Madame Tussaud. A young girl in France during the French Revolution who would learn how to create wax molds of heads (some dead! I didn’t even know that was an actual thing people did!) from her “master.” I think one would call it a novelization (I had to keep remembering it was fiction). I did find myself believing many of the tales or thinking they were at least somewhat truth. Afterwards, you will find yourself scouring Anna Maria Grosholtz’s (Madame Tussaud) Wikipedia page for her life history, and learn what was dramatized and what was real. Either way, author Edward Carey, did an expert job of weaving a tale that although out of my comfort zone kept me turning the page. I needed to read this book in time for book club and had 4 days to read 433 pages, so I alternated between the audio and book every chance I got. I thought the narrator was perfect and it certainly helped with all the pronunciations as I kept reading throughout the book. I do hope you enjoy Little as much as I did, if you decide to read it.

## Technical Specifications

| Specification | Value |
|---------------|-------|
| Best Sellers Rank | #212,595 in Kindle Store ( See Top 100 in Kindle Store ) #34 in Biographical Literary Fiction #218 in Dark Humor #355 in British & Irish Literary Fiction |

## Images

![Little: A Novel - Image 1](https://m.media-amazon.com/images/I/81YkHjPcN9L.jpg)

## Customer Reviews

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Compelling and UNique
*by C***A on January 26, 2019*

What an entertaining, imaginative novel! Carey's narrator/protagonist is Marie Grosholtz,better known today as Madame Toussaud. The story begins as Marie, an unattractive, tiny seven-year old who loves to draw, describes her parents. Marie embellishes the pages of her tale with pencil drawings: when she describes her mother's large nose (which Marie inherited) and her father's upwards-thrust jaw (which she also inherited), she draws these body parts in the margins. Little Marie has two treasured belongings: a faceless doll that her mother made and her father's silver jawbone (a soldier, he lost the original in a battle). When double tragedies befall the family, Marie becomes apprenticed to Dr. Curtius, a reclusive anatomist whose job it is to make wax replicas of human organs for the local hospital's training purposes. Together, they begin the business of taking wax impressions of heads. As things prosper, they are convinced that they must move to Paris, where famous heads are more plentiful. The two take lodging with a tailor's widow and her odd (perhaps autistic) son. When the business prospers, they purchase The Monkey House, the former site of a simian exhibition, and it soon becomes the rage for the rich, famous, and powerful to have their heads cast in wax. This is only the beginning, but I don't want to give too much away. [Little] (the derogatory nickname she is given by the widow) is not only a fictional biography of Marie, it is her first-person account of the court of Louis XVI and of the French Revolution--and a fascinating account it is. From Versailles to the streets of Paris to prison, Marie takes us along on a journey that is both glorious and harrowing, and her encounters with a wide cast of characters, from a feral boy to the king himself to Napoleon, opening a window onto the Reign of Terror and beyond. Throughout, her account is accompanied by her marginal drawings, making it all the more believable that this is Marie's own journal. However great the events and personages, we never forget that this is, indeed, her story. Carey has given his protagonist a unique viewpoint into history and a compelling voice. I loved Marie, and I loved her story of hardships, successes, and survival. I will definitely be looking for other works by this author.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐ A Fascinating Gem of a Read
*by S***R on November 14, 2019*

This is why I love book club: I would not have picked up this book on my own, but so glad I read it. It was not my typical jam and sounded a bit strange…and boy was it strange – an oddity – BUT I couldn’t stop turning the page. You really want to know what happens to all these characters; although I hated me some Widow Picot, what a wicked character. I was a bit fascinated by it all. It is loosely, and I mean loosely, based on the life of Madame Tussaud. A young girl in France during the French Revolution who would learn how to create wax molds of heads (some dead! I didn’t even know that was an actual thing people did!) from her “master.” I think one would call it a novelization (I had to keep remembering it was fiction). I did find myself believing many of the tales or thinking they were at least somewhat truth. Afterwards, you will find yourself scouring Anna Maria Grosholtz’s (Madame Tussaud) Wikipedia page for her life history, and learn what was dramatized and what was real. Either way, author Edward Carey, did an expert job of weaving a tale that although out of my comfort zone kept me turning the page. I needed to read this book in time for book club and had 4 days to read 433 pages, so I alternated between the audio and book every chance I got. I thought the narrator was perfect and it certainly helped with all the pronunciations as I kept reading throughout the book. I do hope you enjoy Little as much as I did, if you decide to read it.

### ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Vivid and extraordinary
*by N***X on March 30, 2020*

Little by Edward Carey tells the extraordinary, fascinating origin story of the real Madame Tussaud: Marie Grosholtz. Some people may not know that Madame Tussaud was a real person, as she seems more like a legend given the various wax museums around the world bearing her name. Marie was real (referred to by the nickname “Little” in Carey’s book) and lived through amazing events that essentially shaped the success of her career as a wax artist. At a very young age, Marie becomes housekeeper/apprentice to Doctor Curtius of Berne, Switzerland. There, Marie learns first hand about human anatomy by way of preserved organs and autopsies. Although socially awkward and unorthodox, Curtius raises Marie up by recognizing her talent for the arts at an early age. He encourages her to draw everything she sees in his laboratory: medical instruments, organs, bones, dead bodies…any of these things would no doubt scare any other child. However, Marie herself was unorthodox in that she finds refuge and comfort among the macabre and grotesque. Carey’s description of the macabre and grotesque is vivid and wonderfully dark. Carey keeps that line throughout the book, never shying away from the imperfection. Never sugar-coating. While most authors would paint their ingénue as beautiful and virtuous, Carey’s Marie is not physically attractive and mostly lacking in romanticism save her love of the artistic quality of her work: i.e. human heads and body parts. Rather than serve as a romantic lead, Marie’s career ambition and love of her work drives her life forward and takes her to places no one of her station ever dreamed, like Versailles. Marie becomes the wax sculpting teacher of Princess Elizabeth, sister of the king himself, and lives in a cupboard (yes, a cupboard for our diminutive Little) at Versailles for ten years. During this time, we get a peak at Marie’s budding teenage sexuality as she carries on what is alluded to as a physical relationship with Elizabeth despite them never being socially equal. Marie’s work drives her through the terror and violence of the French Revolution, where she finds business to be booming in casting molds of freshly severed aristocratic heads. People near her may come and go, but her work always remains. And Marie remains strong, practical, and passionate about her work. Little reads like a movie, and I hope it someday gets adapted to the screen. I knew nothing about the real Madame Tussaud before this book and if you are in the same boat, you will not be disappointed. I can’t rave enough about Carey’s talent for making the grotesque beautiful and fascinating, all the while highlighting the imperfections that make life beautiful–an embodiment of the idea that both Dr. Curtius and Marie passionately believed while creating their sculptures.

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*Product available on Desertcart Philippines*
*Store origin: PH*
*Last updated: 2026-05-19*