Okay so I haven’t yet finished this book—thought I’d be able to do it this morning, but I stayed up too late last night reading it!—but I can safely say this is one of the best books I’ve ever read and a new instant favourite.
I picked it up because I was in Glasgow and in Fopp they have a 2 for £5 deal, which meant I got 6 books cheaper than one back here in Oslo, and it had a pretty cover and promised to be about NYC and writers. And, not so secretly, I LOVE it when writers write about writing! But that’s the teeny tiniest part of what I ended up receiving. I haven’t gotten a deal this good since I was last in Fopp and picked up Revolutionary Road for the same price!
& Sons is a contemporary novel in a neoclassical style, 3rd person omniscient circumvented by use of a narrator, the son, of the deceased friend, of the novel’s kernel, the author A.N. Dyer. The novel focuses, section by section, on a different character, with touches here and there hinting at the progression of other story strands developed in earlier chapters, circling back to people we’ve met as it goes, and every story strand is compelling! Which is the one complaint I usually have about this style, never used so effectively, building character after character and more and more momentum and denseness, until suddenly you know a whole family and their environs over decades, disbelief entirely suspended as if bobbing on a placid sea of STORY!!
It’s everything other contemporary authors have attempted but failed. Its symphonic in the way Donna Tartt’s novels are described to be, but not a single page of it is turgid; it provides a denseness of life and insight and wisdom in the way Jonathan Franzen’s novels are said to do, but none of it is done to show off (because you can feel that intent: the reader is never locked out, simply invited to partake in the joy of observing these characters, who are presented with all of their flaws but never sneered at or judged, just observed for the joy of what we can learn from them, from how we can learn to treat the people like them that we know, and ourselves); postcards, letters, screenplay excerpts are captured in the writing’s flow so seamlessly that all you can think is, “Of course this is what needs to go here!” each step and leap part of a logical progression, never once degrading into gimmickry as it does instantly in the hands of a Garth Risk Hallberg or stony-faced killjoy, William H. Gass.
Great ideas for screenplays and short stories are summarised in mere paragraphs. Excerpts from A. N. Dyer’s masterpiece Ampersand are believably masterful. And as characters here and there remember what certain scenes and characters did for them in Ampersand, so does the reader build an idea of a novel they’ve never read but basically don’t need to, having heard so many snippets from so many people. Voices are handled immaculately. Fleeting characters from smarmy, superficial Hollywood agents, to a Russian street vendor proselytising his respect for pretzels, never once sound unrealistic.
Instantly these moments became my own memories, its brilliant observations colouring my own. Two paraphrased examples: Over years, the memory of an insult “redshifts” to a compliment. Two brothers stare at the bar, “silence seeming etched into the grooves of its wood.” These descriptions never feel forced, as if a writer thought, “Well, something different and non-cliché needs to go here. Better put in something!” as it seems so often elsewhere.
I’ve tried to articulate some of the truths I see in this book in my own writing, but that too has done nothing but add to my joy. The idea that people who are obsessed with death are simply using it as an excuse for not knowing what to do with their lives, for mishandling the weighty obligation of doing something substantial. The narrator wants so much to be part of a famous family, but once he gets the opportunity to observe them closely, he realises, probably at first with prurient pleasure, that every family is flawed, but then as he tells the family’s story it’s clear he learns to love those flaws in them and in himself. A woman sees a new book of Alice Munro short stories and feels guilty because it feels like something she should read, but struggles to get through one dense paragraph. A son goes for a daily run and imagines his father berating him over the life he’s chosen during such and such a mile, but his thoughts oscillate wildly from one mile to another, until he has no clue what to make of any of them. None of this is told to the reader; everything I mention is an offshoot observation or interpretation I’ve applied to the text, which you may or may not agree with—but the point is there’s space for the reader, who’s always treated intelligently, whose role in the novel, again, is to partake in and add to its joy.
& Sons is a harmonious sensitive novel about the complex ways in which men interact with each other: as brothers, pseudofamily, after periods of time, out of obligation, because they need something from one another, because they’re tone-deaf or young or both… It’s maybe the last thing those in the literary community think they need, but few male authors have within them the talent, insight, wisdom and observational skills to convince the reader that exploring the nuanced ways in which men interact is a worthy pursuit, or that men should be given the benefit of assuming there is nuance and could be even more of it if we offered this assumption more readily, that a lot of how men fail to understand each other or lack the tools to interact with anyone properly is as a result of having been deprived of this assumption—admittedly after too much evidence to support this, but you see how that’s a self-fulfilling negative cycle, right? You might also think of the comical and hamfisted struggles of the characters in Manchester by the Sea, whose ability to cope with what life throws at them is far more courageous than most people’s because they manage without knowing how to communicate properly, and so can you, so you leave feeling reassured that despite your failings, it’s life that ultimately fails to throw more at you than you can handle, and, wow, there’s heroism everywhere!
I think anyone can enjoy this novel. What’s wonderful is how the characters seem to change how they feel about themselves and their relation to one another in different environments. While some authors fail to build single dimensions for their characters, in this book in one instance, two brothers, who have been put back in the same environment out of shared concern for their father (it seems), appear to realise how strong a friendship they could have based on how much they share, all the suffering of their youth and early adulthood no longer seeming a waste, only with the catalyst of a young and clueless actor whom they might once have envied but seem to look after like a child. And I saw that anyone of any adult age is bound to feel like a failure somehow, because that’s what we mostly are, yearning for so many lives as we do but ultimately only living one. As the patriarch says, shame will beget pride eventually, time building an armour of resilience.
Just before bed I spoke to my husband and asked him a question I hadn’t managed to work out how to phrase for months, which led to an honest conversation. Have no doubt: when the writing’s like this, like that Victorian literary goal, it improves you as a person. If only all books were like this, did this to us, we’d none of us doubt why we read, but alas, few writers are up to the task.
Like a true novel, even if you told me what was going to happen at the end, you wouldn’t ruin the journey there. There’s no way you can get me to depart from the insight in this book’s remaining 100 pages. I’m half-reeling over how great it has been so far, and half-dismaying that it will soon end.