cover image Playworld

Playworld

Adam Ross. Knopf, $29 (528p) ISBN 978-0-385-35129-4

Family dysfunction and the challenges of adolescence lie at the heart of this compulsively readable outing from Ross (Mr. Peanut). In the book’s most salacious and impactful plot thread, narrator Griffin Hurt looks back with vivid detail and analytical compassion on his teen years in the 1980s, beginning with the affair he had at 14 with family friend Naomi Shah, 22 years his senior. Other story lines delve into Griffin’s career as a child actor and his time on the high school wrestling team. Though the affair ends midway through the novel, Naomi’s friendship with Griffin’s parents, who don’t know about the affair, causes him continued distress. Ross also offers a poignant depiction of the pressure Griffin faces in show business, as his father urges him to take an audition with renowned director Paul Mazursky, whom Griffin’s never heard of, while he’d prefer to focus on wrestling. Ross casts the period in a dark light, touching on the turbulence of such historical episodes as the Iran hostage crisis and the Reagan assassination attempt and laying bare the moral emptiness of the adults in Griffin’s life. Readers will enjoy getting caught up in this sharp, discursive narrative. (Jan.)