Mothers and Sons by Adam Haslett

Adam Haslett’s new novel Mothers and Sons is both powerful and challenging. Powerful because he writes beautifully and astutely about family dynamics, the complexity of people’s interior lives and how secrets can grow like ulcers.

Peter Fisher is a 40-year-old work-acholic lawyer in New York City who helps immigrants apply for asylum. In fact, his job requires that he probe the most painful parts of his clients’ lives to prove that his client’s lives would be in danger if they returned to their country of birth. Immersed in this role, he isolates himself from friends and family. He rarely visits his mother Ann who leads a women’s retreat center in rural Vermont. Ann and Peter have been estranged for two decades since Peter was involved in a tragedy when he was in his teens. They buried the secret of what happened beneath the overwhelming demands of their jobs.  Both Ann and Peter listen to people’s stories, empathize and assist.  Yet, when one of Peter’s asylum-seeking client’s story echoes his own, Peter’s begins to understand that he had unconsciously altered the trajectory of his life. He reaches out to his mother. Only by discussing their shared secret are Peter and Ann finally able to escape the lingering anxiety that haunted them.

Mothers and Sons may not be a good fit for every reader but Haslett’s novel illustrates his deep appreciation for the healing power of hearing other people’s stories and reflecting on the stories we tell ourselves. 3.5/5

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