Troika
Three Generations, Three Days, and a Very American Road Trip
-
- Précommander
-
- Sortie prévue le 7 avr. 2026
-
- 13,99 €
-
- Précommander
-
- 13,99 €
Description de l’éditeur
In this lyrical and artfully woven memoir, a short road trip to California’s Central Coast becomes an epic journey through family history, loss, and connection.
When three generations of women—a Gen X narrator, her seventy-seven-year-old mother, and her twenty-two-year-old Gen Z daughter—set out for a quick trip to California's Central Coast, what begins as a road trip soon transforms into something far richer: a modern-day Odyssey. Over the course of three days, the three women brave a severe winter storm, encounter ravenous ostriches, walk through an enchanted light exhibit, binge-watch White Lotus, hunt for coffee with plant-based milk, bicker, reconcile, and share stories.
Troika braids the narrative of a three-day road trip with the longer strands of migration, memory, and motherhood, creating a layered meditation on distance traveled—geographic, generational, and emotional. The result is a kaleidoscopic journey that traverses the landscapes of identity and family history and stretches from the horrors of the second world war and an escape from Soviet Russia to adolescence and motherhood in the suburbs of Silicon Valley. As the narrative swerves from heartbreak to hilarity, from Homeric detours and Russian proverbs to internet memes, it weaves together an intimate, poignant, and darkly funny meditation on how we get from where we were to where we are—and what we carry with us along the way.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Smith (The Golden Ticket) chronicles in this charming, bittersweet memoir a road trip she took across California with her mother and daughter in 2023. Though the trip's destination—the Field of Light art installation in Paso Robles—is carefully planned, missed turns, minor mishaps, and emotional detours arise after "the stylish one, the responsible one, and the fun one" (Smith's mother, Smith, and Smith's daughter, respectively) depart from Palo Alto. As the miles tick by, Smith interweaves travelogue with family history, recalling anecdotes both comic and poignant, including her father's obsession with CB radios and a disastrous incident when her mother accidentally flung her wedding ring into a zoo enclosure in Rome. The women are linked, too, by pop culture, including a shared affinity for The White Lotus ("There is something deeply satisfying in watching rich people having a terrible time in one of the most beautiful places on earth"). Beneath the humor runs a graver current, as Smith discusses her family's Soviet-Jewish heritage and the varied fates of her ancestors after Germany invaded the Soviet Union during WWII. It adds up to a modest but affecting account of cross-generational exchange. Correction: An earlier version of this review confused the author's parents with her grandparents.