Haleh Agar
TWO siblings, who became estranged after their fractured
childhood, are forced to confront long-buried tensions when a letter arrives
from their dying father. But can the brother and sister ever truly resolve the conflicts
and traumas of the past… and rediscover the powerful bonds that traditionally
hold families together?
In a clever and compelling debut novel that impresses with
its quiet power and elegant, sensitive storytelling, Canadian-born Haleh Agar
brings us a penetrating exploration of a dysfunctional family, and the secrets,
betrayals, insecurities and feelings of guilt that have torn them apart for
twenty years.
Out of Touch stars two troubled siblings who must tread
through a minefield of emotions, hidden complexes, and painful memories when
their long-absent father reveals he is terminally ill and pleads with them both
to get in touch. The re-awakening of their early years – and the new
imperative to find the strength to look back and the capacity to forgive – lies
at the heart of this deeply personal and resonant tale which shines a piercing
light on the often turbulent dynamics of contemporary family life.
IMPRESSIVE DEBUT NOVEL: Haleh Agar |
When their newspaper editor father, Lee Bridges, was forced
to leave their home in London and quit the country after a scandal twenty years
ago, the lives of teenagers Michael and Ava changed forever.
The two young people coped with their parents’ broken
relationship in different ways. Michael forged a fresh start and career for
himself as a university lecturer in New York, while Ava was left behind to look
after her demanding mother Elena who moved them to a new home in rural
Derbyshire.
Elena died five months ago but Ava is still stuck in a rut,
living in her mother’s dreary bungalow and working in a local department store.
But everything changes the day Ava receives a letter from her long-lost father
informing her that he is dying and wants to make contact with her again. That same night, a man accidentally hits Ava with his car
just a few miles from her home and she suffers a broken pelvis and leg. Distressed
at what has happened, Sam Ghadimi, whose parents are Iranian, brings her
flowers in hospital, the letter she dropped that night on the road, and maybe
‘the prospect of a happy future awaiting her.’
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Click HERE for Lancashire Post review
Meanwhile, in New York, Ava’s brother Michael receives the
same letter. Michael has made a new life for himself with his high-flying
Lebanese wife Layla and their two-year-old son Jacob. But true happiness has
eluded Michael who is dogged by self-doubt and haunted by feelings of anxiety
and guilt over his wife’s curtailed career ambitions, their vulnerable son, and
the sister he left behind. When he is thrown into the path of Sarah Addams, a sculptor
from London who is living in
a nearby apartment, she gives Michael food for thought and a new perspective, making him imagine, somewhat enviously, her life ‘filled with travel and hobbies, movement and stillness, everything possible.’
a nearby apartment, she gives Michael food for thought and a new perspective, making him imagine, somewhat enviously, her life ‘filled with travel and hobbies, movement and stillness, everything possible.’
But neither Michael nor Ava can avoid the letter from their
father… can they forgive him and face each other after all these years apart?
Agar’s gift for writing about weighty issues with the
lightest of touches, and a wry wit that takes the sting out of the siblings’ angst-ridden
remembrances, provide added ballast to a story – steeped in emotional wisdom
and heartbreaking realities – about the damage inflicted by fractured relationships.
This rich authenticity is very much down to a beautifully
portrayed cast of culturally diverse characters… from the complex and
conflicted, half-Greek-Cypriots Ava and Michael with their soft belly of
insecurity, to the amiable, caring Sam with his Iranian heritage, ambitious
Layla whose career has been put on hold, and the gregarious, bohemian Sarah from
cosmopolitan Camden Town.
The search for happiness and belonging in an increasingly
impersonal world, the struggle to find a sense of self-worth, and the desire
for reunion and closure all play intrinsic roles in Out of Touch. It’s a tale
of our times which dazzles us with its veracity and poignancy, and ultimately
delivers a warm and uplifting message of hope that however messy family life
can be, the pay-offs are both joyful and rewarding.
(W&N, hardback, £14.99)
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