|
T. Clark is the author of All This Want (and I Canāt Get None), out today from One World. Below, they recommend three books with missing parental figures.
My debut collection, All This Want (and I Canāt Get None), features 12 stories of protagonists chasing desires. The desires can be complicated; characters want things that are dangerous, counterintuitive, illogical, and strange. They are products of their circumstances, and for a myriad of reasons, their parents are physically absent and almost always unavailable to give wisdom or offer an inkling of common sense. Here are three books that might also make you ask, āWhere are the parents?ā
Trust Exercise by Susan Choi: Susan Choiās novel is told in three parts, with the first chunk set in a southern high school for performing arts. The students are ambitious, overachieving actors who spend a good deal of their free time rehearsing and trying to keep their reputations (and hormones) in check. Adult guidance comes not in the form of parents but in charismatic teachers, overseas visitors, and friendsā parents, forcing the characters to determine who they can really trust.
Gorilla My Love by Toni Cade Bambara: This short story collection features protagonists of all ages and family structures, but the title story, āGorilla, My Love,ā is a swift lesson in the disillusionment of youthful innocence. The story plays out completely in the narratorās mind, save for the blips of conversation she has with the adults in the car. She learns, in innocent yet heartbreaking ways, that adults are hypocrites and are not to be trusted. Left with her own conclusions, she leans into caring for her little brother, Baby Jason, hoping she can shield him from the truth a bit longer.
A Childrenās Bible by Lydia Millet: In this novel, we know exactly where the parents are: getting wasted in the next room.Ā The children of Lydia Milletās novel are forced to reckon with their hedonistic, wealthy, ill-prepared parentsā inability to care for them in the face of climate catastrophe. The kids collaborate and problem solve while their parents drink and party their way deeper into depression.Ā
|