cover image The Adventurer’s Son: A Memoir

The Adventurer’s Son: A Memoir

Roman Dial. Morrow, $28.99 (368p) ISBN 978-0-06-287660-7

A father’s outdoor adventures lead his son into danger in this gripping memoir. Dial, a biology professor at Alaska Pacific University, recounts the disappearance of his 27-year-old son, Cody Roman Dial, during a solo jungle trek in Costa Rica’s Corcovado National Park. Flying down to lead the search, the author found a primeval forest full of perils—deadly snakes, falling trees, prowling drug smugglers—and bewildering mysteries: government bureaucrats blocked his searches; purported sightings of Cody accompanied by a local criminal surfaced; and Dial got enmeshed with a reality-TV show spinning a murder theory about the disappearance. Backgrounding the narrative are Dial’s recollections of his own dangerous adventures—in one heart-stopping mountain-climbing incident, he leaped into a precipice to counterbalance a roped partner’s plunge off the opposite side of a ridge—and of taking Cody, from the age of six, on risky wilderness excursions and white-water rafting trips. Dial conveys both his guilt at setting his son on that fateful path and the allure of that path—“[m]y grief painted the jungle black, but the heart of the Osa’s wilderness still left me awed.... I couldn’t shut out forever the joy in seeing a kingfisher’s blue flash or a spider monkey’s graceful swing.” Dial paints a riveting, richly conflicted portrait of family legacies and the call of the wild. (Feb.)