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THE IMPOSTERS by Tom Rachman

THE IMPOSTERS

by Tom Rachman

Pub Date: June 27th, 2023
ISBN: 9780316552851
Publisher: Little, Brown

The final manuscript by an elderly novelist whose memory is failing is the springboard for a meditation on the creative process and the loneliness of the writer’s life.

Dora Frenhofer was never a bestselling author, and over the years her “succession of small novels about small men in small crises” have sold fewer and fewer copies for smaller and smaller publishers. Now, 73 years old and isolated in her London home by the pandemic lockdown, she works desultorily on a new novel written in her own voice (“not pretending to be anyone else for a change”), with each chapter centered on a different character. These chapters alternate with diary entries that describe Dora’s experiences during the lockdown and end with various crossed-out sentences that eventually lead to the opening of the next chapter. Each chapter’s protagonist is someone connected to Dora: her estranged daughter, her brother, an immigrant hired to clear out her house, a fellow participant in a literary festival, a bicycle deliveryman, a former lover, and a longtime friend. She invents stories for them—an unrequited love, imprisonment and torture, the murders of two children—that are slowly revealed to be Dora’s embroidery of events from her own history. Or are they? Nothing is for certain in an intricately braided narrative that constantly suggests new possibilities about the factual underpinnings of fiction. The characters are viewed through Dora’s uncharitable eyes; the compassion for damaged souls that suffused such earlier Rachman novels as The Rise & Fall of the Great Powers and The Italian Teacher is still in evidence here, but it’s muffled by Dora’s brutally blunt judgments of their personal failings and professional failures—and her own. The interplay among various versions of the characters’ links to Dora is fascinating, and Rachman’s prose is lucid and elegant, as always. But the bleak tone throughout, culminating in an appropriately grim conclusion, makes this austere novel difficult to engage with emotionally.

Fine, uncompromising work likely to prompt admiration more than wholehearted appreciation.