Monday, December 24, 2018
The Rise & Fall Of Great Powers by Tom Rachman
We meet Tooly Zylberberg as an adult. She runs an independent bookstore in Wales. To say that Tooly had an unconventional upbringing would be an understatement. She remembers living in Hong Kong with her father, Paul, who loves birds and computers and doesn't seem to know what to do with her. She is spirited away by Sarah, a free spirit who claims to love Tooly more than anything in the world while ignoring her for days on end; the last person one would trust to raise a child. In actuality, Tooly spends her days with Humphrey, an elderly Russian man who loves books and Tooley and not much else, who cannot give a straightforward account of his life and looks at the world askew, a viewpoint he shares with her. Then there is Venn. Venn is a charismatic man who all the others revolve around. He travels the world, making friends quickly, then leaving them when they discover that he isn't who he seemed to be and that his real mission was to con them out of their money. Tooley grows up around these people, not attending school and learning mostly how to remain separate from others and to use them for her own gains.
When a former boyfriend tracks Tooly down over Facebook and informs her that her father (as friends think Humphrey is) has fallen on bad times, Tooley decides that it is time to discover the truth about her life. She flies to the United States and indeed, finds Humphrey in a bad way, living in a decrepit rooming house and rarely leaving his room. She tracks down Paul and Sarah and finds out their piece of her story. It is only when she reunites with these companions of her youth that she comes to realize that the stories she has believed all her life were false and that the truth of how she came to be an adult is largely based on ideas she generated as a young girl adrift in the world. Will she be able to find the truth at last?
This is a wonderful novel and will be in the top five of the year for me. It is filled with marvelous characters and the reader is entranced with Tooley's journey to find her truth. The reality of her life is so different from what she has always believed that one must reexamine their own truths to see if memory and childhood explanations have hidden truths for years. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
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