A disappearance brings together a host of disparate lives in early-1980s California.
This novel, Almond’s first, follows a number of acclaimed story collections and works of nonfiction. He’s opted to use the biggest possible canvas, incorporating a diverse cast of characters and a host of weighty themes. The resulting novel is incredibly ambitious while also featuring some unexpected touches—scorpion biology and Nancy Reagan both play significant roles. The bulk of the novel is set in California in 1981. Lorena Saenz, age 13, is partnered with classmate Jenny Stallworth for a science fair project. Lorena is the daughter of an undocumented mother and comes from a working-class background; Jenny’s family, by contrast, is wealthy. More ominously, Jenny’s father, Marcus—a scientist and academic with an interest in scorpions—develops an attraction to Lorena. Almond summons plenty of tension from the question of whether or not Marcus will do something awful—right up until the point when he vanishes under mysterious circumstances and Lorena’s older brother, Tony, becomes a suspect in his disappearance. It’s at this point that Pedro Guerrero, one of the police officers investigating the case, enters the narrative, expanding its scope beyond the two families of the early chapters. Almond is grappling with a lot of weighty themes: Class disparities, sexual abuse, corrupt policing, immigration, and the modern Republican Party (including a couple of references to the Romney family) all play significant parts here. But while the large-scale tragedy that plays out is thought-provoking, the novel’s stranger digressions—like glowing scorpions—are what endure.
Almond’s first novel is ambitious and empathic but sometimes unwieldy.