According to his obituary, Wesley Sultan died at the age of 63, leaving behind three children, a wife, an ex-wife, a brother, a sister, and a life-long business career. According to his obituary, Wesley Sultan led a quiet, respectable, and unremarkable life. Our narrator, however, is about to discover that nothing could be further from the truth.
Using Sultan’s obituary as a road map to the unknown terrain of the man himself, our narrator discovers dead-ends, wrong turns, and unexpected destinations in every line. As he travels from the bleak Michigan winter to the steamy streets of Miami to the idyllic French countryside, in search of those who knew Wesley best, he gradually reconstructs the life of an exceptionally handsome, ambitious, and deceptive man to whom women were everything. And as the margins of the obituary fill with handwritten corrections, as details emerge and facts are revised, our mysterious narrator–whose interest in his quarry is far from random–has no choice but to confront the truth of his own life as well.
BRAD LEITHAUSER is a widely acclaimed poet and novelist and the recipient of numerous awards and honors, including a MacArthur Fellowship. This is his seventeenth book. He is a professor in the Writing Seminars at Johns Hopkins University and divides his time between Baltimore and Amherst.
Great title, especially as it relates to the subject matter. Obituaries are very revealing, not only in what they say, but what they omit. I thoroughly enjoyed this clever book. But then, I've sometimes been accused of having a warped sense of humor:)
Another little novel that could. The central conceit is that as the narrator learns more on his journey about the late Wesley Sultan, he discovers he must make a few corrections to Wesley’s inaccurate obituary.
This was my first Leithauser. I really liked his descriptions place and moral attitudes. I have mixed feelings about the contrivance of the story-- the editing of the obituary was clever and kept up some of the suspense, but not that crazy about the other major contrivance (which I will not spoil by revealing). Overall, I found it not terribly profound, but very engaging and will definitely read another Leithauser.
Wes Sultan has just died and a mysterious researcher is looking into what Wes was really like, as opposed to what his obituary says. Halfway through the book, we learn that this researcher is Wes's estranged son Luke. By talking to family members, he makes a few corrections to the obituary and learns what his father was truly like.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
It’s clever, this one: the concept of an obituary being gradually corrected, the delayed reveal of the narrator, complete with the perfect Proust joke... But fortunately it isn’t all just gimmicks. The characters take on real life as the story progresses, especially strangely fascinating Sally and delightfully cantankerous Conrad. 4+ stars, and quite the pleasant surprise.
I enjoyed (if that is the word) this well-written novel. A son rewrites the story of his Da's obituary, while doing so he begins to understand his father. Weird synchronicity with my fathers' death.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
A slow unfolding of one man's convoluted life. The book opens with his obituary, then proceeds to change it as errors (or lies) are uncovered. I read this on the way home from my holiday; good for dipping in and out of.
This is a true wonder of a book. A man dies and his obituary, nothing fancy, is written. And in the subsequent chapters the author works through his life showing that nothing was what it seemed. The obit needed "a few corrections".
while the idea (the ever changing Obit) is intriguing, it went on too long. I was getting bored with the tale of Wesley Sultan toward the end. Glad I sucked it up to finish it, but....eh.