Narrator Sandra embarks on an odyssey through the afterlife to her autistic son, who is literally and figuratively lost at sea: a hilarious and deeply moving voyage of the body and the mind. “It was a strange experience, speaking to someone who didn’t tune in to you. It was like talking hallucinogens” Sandra said.

Following a documentary producer who dies and desperately tries to rescue her child while her spirit still roams the earth, Amie Barrodale’s debut novel Trip as much about neurodivergence and the impossibility of human empathy as it is about the bizarreness of the afterlife. Trip is also the name of Sandra’s recalcitrant 15-year-old, and this psychedelic novel leans into all senses of the word. The family’s lives go awry when Sandra, called to Nepal for work, and her intellectual ex-husband Vic, unable to care for their only child, single-handedly, decide to leave Trip in a dubious treatment centre, hours from home while she’s away. Vic has repeatedly tried to stall Sandra’s career, an antagonism that steels her determination to go in spite of his self-regarding protestations.

Sandra dies at a death conference in Nepal attended by academics and mystics. Days later, back in America, her teenage son, Trip runs away with  Anthony, a dodgy landlord who considers Bill W, and picks him up on the side of a road. Sandra tries to get a message back to Trip through the mystics, but the mystics are distracted, and her son and the strange man set out to sea.

Amid this bustling panoply, Sandra winds up sidelined in her own first person narrative, treated merely  as a protective mother without much other personality or back-story. Barrodale’s vision in Trip of an afterlife where out-of-body souls gain wisdom, new perspectives  and an “openness to all situations and emotions” about to let it go.

Amie Barrodale’s first 2016 novel, features restless souls, Buddhists deities, divorcees in recovery programs, arguing academics, uncomprehending school principals, and treatment centres for troubled teenagers, effectively people being fundamentally at odds with one another, and journeys from body to body, through life and death and back again. It tells the story of a mother and son who find other people hard to understand and who are themselves misunderstood.  Guiding this wild, unpredictable journey is deep devotion; the desire  to save a child and to be good mother despite it all.

Wide-eyed with wonder, blazingly funny and achingly moving, Trip brings us the deeper meaning of The Tibetan Book of the Dead: the past is a memory, the future is a projection, the present is gone before we can see it.

Sandra’s documentary project revolves unsubtly around a conference on death, enticing a motley array of scholars from mediums to neurologists.  Once there, Sandra meets her demise – a rather protracted one- first wedging herself in a cave, then being freed, before exhausted, slipping in the hotel bathroom.

Trip by Amie Barrodale, Jonathan Cape£16.9 9  /Farrar Straus and Giroux $28, 304 pages.

One response to “Focus on Parenting”

  1. pennynairprice avatar
    pennynairprice

    Stories and movies covering those members of society who are disadvantaged and mentally impaired in particular by suffering from psychiatric abnormalities are coming thick and fast and winning acclaim and awards. For some reason the public is fascinated and enchanted by these issues and keen to know more in some form or other be it on television, in the cinema, on social media or in a book.

    The reality of families with special needs therein involves divorces and stressful experiences mostly but with love and care a couple can come together and operate as a pair though I have personally known couples who have broken up over these issues and one lady married the social worker who helped her over one of her children being paraplegic after his father left.

    The book may prove interesting reading so why not give it a try and do less facebook for some time? You can let The Neptune Herald know when you’ve read it if you want. Watch this space.

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