Remember This
A Novel
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- $14.99
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- $14.99
Publisher Description
The author of Norumbega Park returns with a bravura novel about the secrets artists keep—from the rest of the world, and from themselves.
Even though Miranda Rando, a forty-year-old writer living in Brooklyn, is making breakthroughs in her biography of a powerful woman artist, she can’t escape the all-commanding presence of her father, Henry. And now that he has written a slightly embarrassing and shockingly successful self-help book, the seventy-year-old playwright is everywhere.
Henry’s sudden rise to prominence—along with his need to grapple more deeply with his own religious life— leads him to join a mission to Haiti. There, he meets a young man eager to come to America. But his motivation to help becomes complicated by his disturbing attraction to the boy. It also comes to threaten his relationships with his daughter and his wife, Lily, a successful actress.
Miranda and Henry play out their separate dramas until the lives of the father and daughter become hopelessly intertwined. Miranda’s drive to understand the mysterious artist she’s profiling becomes a journey into the past, into the lost New York of the 1970s, a time whose social and political fervency will always be wrapped up with her own childhood. That journey, existing alongside Henry’s need to test the boundaries of their relationship, leads her to a new awareness of how much artists will always withhold from their children, and from the world.
Anthony Giardina’s Remember This moves through the cutthroat contemporary art world, the New York theater scene, and post-earthquake Haiti to ask questions about artistic legacies, and about the root of family relationships. What secrets are necessary for us to keep? How much can we ask of each other? And what truths will remain forever hidden?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Giardina (Norumbega Park) explores in this intelligent novel the shifting relationship between an aging playwright and his daughter. Miranda Rando, an aspiring writer approaching 40, works in the shadow of her father, Henry, who's currently celebrating the success of his advice book for seniors, How to Be This Age. At 70, Henry finds fulfillment from charitable work with his church. While on a mission in Haiti, he notices a "beautiful" 17-year-old boy named Jean, and he resolves to help Jean get an education in America while wrestling with the fact that his interest in the teenager is more than philanthropic. Meanwhile, as Miranda completes a biography of late painter Anna Soloff, she falls under the Svengali-like spell of Soloff's Manhattan gallerist, Andrew Schechner. After an excerpt of Miranda's book is published in the New Yorker, her accomplishment alters the dynamic between daughter and father ("You're transcending me," he tells her). Henry also continues to pursue his interest in helping Jean, who's still in Haiti, causing tension with his wife. Giardina writes knowingly about the worlds of theater and literature, and his deliciously flawed characters are great company. The result is a perceptive look at artists and their limitations.