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Imaginary Friend by Stephen Chbosky

- — Bill Sheehan/The Washington Post

Imaginary Friend is Stephen Chbosky’s first new novel in 20 years, and it comes as a complete surprise. Chbosky’s only other published work, 1999’s The Perks of Being a Wallflower, concerned a trio of self-styled misfits navigating the complexiti­es of high school, adolescent angst, sexual confusion, and assorted personal traumas. Over the years, the book has led a charmed life, acquiring millions of readers and serving as the basis for a popular film adapted and directed by Chbosky. Those many readers now have something new and unexpected to contemplat­e. Weighing in at over 700 pages, Imaginary

Friend is an all-out, not-for-the-faintheart­ed horror novel, one of the most effective and ambitious of recent years. Who would have guessed?

To be sure, the underlying sensibilit­y that characteri­zed Wallf lower is present in the new book, particular­ly in its empathetic portraits of people struggling to recover from personal tragedy. Beyond that, Imaginary Friend is a radical departure on virtually every level. Perhaps its most impressive aspect is the confidence with which Chbosky deploys the more fantastica­l elements of his complex narrative, using the baroque, hallucinat­ory imagery of horror fiction to tell a very human story with universal implicatio­ns.

That story begins with an enigmatic prologue that takes place 50 years before the primary narrative begins. David Olson, a young boy living in the small, isolated town of Mill Grove, Pennsylvan­ia, sneaks out of his house in the middle of the night on a hazardous mission that he alone can undertake: to prevent a demonic entity known as “the hissing lady” from entering our world, and to save the life of his beloved older brother, Ambrose. The prologue ends when David disappears into the nearby Mission Street Woods — a haunted stretch of forest bordering the town — never to return to this world.

The narrative then moves to the present day. A new family, Kate Reese and her 8-year-old son, Christophe­r, have just moved to Mill Grove, fleeing an abusive relationsh­ip. Christophe­r — lonely, dyslexic, still mourning the recent suicide of his father — wanders into the same stretch of forest that swallowed David Olson. Unlike David, Christophe­r returns home after six days, subtly changed. And the town around him soon begins to change as well.

From this point forward, the mysteries of the Mission Street Woods dominate the novel, and two central premises quickly emerge. First, a distorted, disorienti­ng alternate world lies parallel to our own “real” world, and it can be accessed only through portals in the woods. Second, two opposing figures are conducting an ancient war below the surface of Mill Grove. One of these is the hissing lady. The other is a mysterious figure known alternatel­y as “the soldier” and “the nice man.” In Christophe­r’s limited view, the nice man is the one force standing between the vulnerable human world and the hissing lady’s malignant designs. Things, it turns out, are a lot more complicate­d than that.

Although he doesn’t realize it, Christophe­r now possesses previously untapped powers, and his arrival in Mill Grove is the precipitat­ing event in a supernatur­al drama. Once he has returned from the woods, life in Mill Grove begins to darken. One young, devout Catholic girl finds herself pregnant for no discernibl­e reason. Unhappy marriages turn suddenly lethal. Parents who were once the victims of abuse now inflict the same abuse on their children. As the barrier between worlds grows steadily thinner, reality and fantasy, dreams and waking life, begin to blur together. And Christophe­r, newly empowered, becomes a major player in a primordial battle that threatens, quite literally, to establish hell on Earth. Beneath its gaudy supernatur­al surface, Imaginary

Friend is a book with many things on its mind. It is, of course, a horror novel, and it delivers more than its share of profoundly disturbing moments. Beyond that, it provides a compelling portrait of small-town life, while examining the ways in which lovelessne­ss and systematic abuse eat away at the fabric of family and community life. At the same time, through its portrayal of the relationsh­ip between Christophe­r and his ferociousl­y protective mother, it offers one of the most affecting accounts of parental devotion I’ve seen in a very long time. The result is a pageturnin­g meditation on human suffering whose spiritual dimension does not become fully apparent until the entire story has been told. Imaginary Friend may have been a long time coming, but the time was well spent. This is an absorbing, original, and genuinely surprising novel. I hope we don’t have to wait 20 more years to see where Chbosky goes next.

Chbosky’s novel is a page-turning meditation on human suffering whose spiritual dimension does not become fully apparent until the entire story has been told.

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