Cape Times

Memories reshuffled to alter life scenarios

Interplay between technology, relationsh­ips has startling results

- COME WITH ME Helen Schulman Loot.co.za (R289) HARPER Washington Post

HELEN Schulman’s Come With Me delves into the interplay of technology and relationsh­ips with edgy, upsetting and tragic results. And yet, the story is also warm, wise and witty.

Married Silicon Valley parents Amy and Dan Messinger face somewhat typical middle-aged challenges in their personal and profession­al lives. Amy is a publicist for her best friend’s son Donny, a Stanford undergradu­ate who has a start-up (naturally). Dan, meanwhile is an unemployed journalist, but instead of looking for paying work, he opts to accompany a videograph­er to the Fukushima nuclear disaster site. Their teenage son Jack spends nearly all his time online with his girlfriend Lily, who even joins the family at mealtimes via Jack’s laptop. Their younger identical twins, whom they call “Thing One” and “Thing Two” are having trouble at school. No one in this family is content, exactly.

That’s why Donny’s fledgling website, Furrier.com, appeals to Amy. The name of the site is a callback to Donny’s grandmothe­r, who used to say that she should have “married the furrier”.

Furrier.com gives people access to “the multiverse”, where stored memories can be reshuffled to form alternate life scenarios. According to Donny: “If there is infinite space, there are infinite grandmas making infinitely different decisions, and therefore all these grandmas lived infinitely different lives. In one she shacked up with the furrier.”

But the outcomes aren’t all rosy, which is clear when Amy becomes Donny’s guinea pig, leading her to relive one of her greatest regrets.

Dan’s journey with videograph­er Maryam gives him access to other possible outcomes, too. Maryam, a transgende­r woman, owns her beauty and sexuality in ways Dan has never experience­d, and the two fall in love. Their bond seems less like infidelity and more like a homecoming as they traverse the disaster-torn, unpopulate­d Japanese landscape. Their uninterrup­ted stretches of one-on-one time feels especially intimate in our digitally focused world. But could such a connection survive in our modern times? While Maryam is an interestin­g character, her portions tend to drag and dominate. More time could be spent on Jack and Lily, for example, whose relationsh­ip defines the book in an important way, but who become something of a sad joke.

Come With Me elicits more than one feeling at a time: sadness and amusement, love and hate, edginess and safety. The encompassi­ng acceptance makes it feel contempora­ry and classic.

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