
Within the confines of a Midwestern college town, Century's Son poignantly explores all that remains unsaid between family members still mourning the suicide of a teenage son.

"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title. Intricate, beautifully observed, and delicately wrought, Century’s Son confirms Robert Boswell’s position as a peerless chronicler of domestic life. His deceitful, smooth-talking vibrancy invigorates and infuriates everybody around him. He embraces Emma and her child he recognizes and exploits all of the small hypocrisies and foibles of daily life. He forces Morgan and Zhenya to confront themselves, their children alive and dead, and their lives past, present, and future, as lived, as planned, and as imagined. Peter’s arrival, though it tears at the family, also re-juvenates it. Unfortunately, Zhenya has discovered several inconsistencies in her father’s invented history, and she also discovers the limits of her patience with his neediness and self-dramatization. in the American South, and to have visited a strip club with Arkansas governor Bill Clinton. A Russian writer and an impresario of history, Peter Ivanovich claims to have had the opportunity to assassinate Joseph Stalin, to have marched with Martin Luther King Jr. Into this sullen mix marches the Century’s Son, Peter Ivanovich Kamenev, Zhenya’s exasperating father. Their surviving child, Emma, has become a teenage mother and refuses to reveal the identity of her child’s father.

The suicide of their son, Philip, some ten years before has left the pair emotionally dead, lacking even the courage or initiative to separate from each other.
He is a former labor organizer who now works as a garbage collector, and she is a political science professor and the daughter of a prominent Russian émigré. In the small college town of Hayden, Illinois, Morgan and Zhenya have settled into a loveless, stagnant marriage. Only a handful of Boswell’s contemporaries have written anything better than Century’s Son.”įrom Robert Boswell, one of America’s most acclaimed and gifted writers, the story of a Midwestern family riven and bound together by tragedy, love, and circumstance. “The texture of this replete portrayal of Middle America and its discontents suggests an inspired collaboration between Anne Tyler and John Cheever. “A moving portrait of a family united and divided by a tragic loss, a subtle meditation on moral responsibility, and a slyly funny comedy of errors, Century’s Son is a heartbreaking, ultimately exhilarating novel by one of America’s finest writers.”
