'Without ever raising your voice, you have shattered the family silence that scabbed over tragedy and produced a work so powerful, so moving that it lingers long after reading.Magnificent' - Annie Ernaux, Nobel Prize winning author of The YearsIt is 1981.As a wave of puzzling medical cases sweeps across the US, a Parisian doctor is presented with a rare case of a disease long thought to be eradicated.It marks the beginning of a race on both sides of the Atlantic to make sense of a deadly virus that will define a generation. Miles away in rural France, Anthony Passeron’s family are dealing with a crisis of their own.Their small village is gripped by another epidemic – heroin addiction.Anthony’s uncle Désiré, once the pride of the family, has become one of its many ‘sleeping children’.Often found unconscious on street corners, he is a stranger to his family.As Désiré’s life descends into chaos, the thunder of the AIDS crisis grows closer.These two stories - one intimate, one global - are about to collide. For readers of Édouard Louis, Douglas Stuart and Annie Ernaux, Sleeping Children by Anthony Passeron is a moving and eye-opening book about shame and the slow poisoning of a family by the secrets it keeps.Exploring the stories of the heroic few who fought for a cure for AIDs and for justice for a community abandoned, it is a radical vision of a history reshaped, retold and remembered. Translated from the French by Frank Wynne