The Imagined Life
Andrew Porter. Knopf, $28 (288p) ISBN 978-0-593-53805-0
In the satisfying if muted latest from Porter (The Disappeared), a middle-aged writer sets out to discover why his father abandoned him and his mother four decades earlier. Steve has recently begun a trial separation from his wife and young son, and his quest unfolds on two tracks: by road, as he travels up the California coast to visit his disgraced English professor father’s friends and relatives, and via memories, as he works through his last year with his father, beginning in summer 1983 when he was 11. He remembers his father’s boisterous backyard pool parties at their home in Fullerton, Calif., and the days his father would spend in the cabana with close friend and colleague Deryck Evanson. Looking back, Steve recognizes that his mother had caught onto his father’s affair with Deryck. His road trip includes a stop in Ojai to see his uncle Julian, with whom he discusses his father’s failed bid for tenure shortly before his disappearance. “He was railroaded,” Julian claims, defending his brother’s merit and referencing an obscure controversy. Further up the road, Steve uncovers a few secrets as he tries to make sense of his own life in relation to his father’s. Though there aren’t many surprises, there’s a comforting quality to Steve’s insights about fathers and sons. This therapeutic novel is worth a look. (Apr.)
Details
Reviewed on: 05/08/2025
Genre: Fiction
Other - 978-0-593-68641-6
Paperback - 978-1-78770-590-6