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The Boy He Left Behind

A Man's Search for His Lost Father

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"A riveting story in the hands of a master storyteller."—James McBride, The Color of Water

"I was four years old when my father came back to kidnap me," begins this gripping memoir about Matousek's search for James Matousek, the drifter father he never knew. Described by the New York Times as "part reminiscence, part detective story, part spiritual musing," this memoir is more than the story of one man's search for his father; it is also a look at the meaning of life and how fathers contribute to that meaning.
Growing up in a family of troubled women (Matousek's sister committed suicide when the author was 29), he describes the turmoil of growing up "fatherless in America"—an experience shared by millions of children in what sociologists have called the Age of the Absent Father—and the difficult, ultimately successful, struggle to figure out what being a man really means in an age of shifting definitions and evolving sexuality. With the tension of a mystery story, the climax occurs when Matousek meets a man he believes to be his father. But is he? And does Matousek, who has reconciled with his mother as she lay dying, really care? These are just two questions leading to this memoir's surprising conclusion.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from February 28, 2000
      Following his acclaimed memoir, Sex Death Enlightenment, Matousek has produced an equally riveting account of his search--at age 38, with the help of a private detective--for the father who abandoned him at age four. A former senior editor of Interview magazine, Matousek grew up in suburban Los Angeles in the late 1950s and '60s. His mother struggled in poverty to raise three daughters and Mark, whom she defended against homophobic taunts while punishing him with silence and emotional distance for what she feared was his true sexual identity. Without a father, Matousek says, he felt unworthy, "fundamentally unblessed, as a person and as a man." He blames the absence of his father for the family's spinning out of control. Marcia, the author's half-sister, committed suicide at 29; Matousek finds evidence suggesting that their father sexually abused her. His other sisters suffered difficult relationships throughout their lives, while at 14 Matousek embarked on binges of petty crime, drugs and sex with other boys and girls, followed by years of nomadic spiritual wandering in Europe and India. There is no closure here--dad is never found--but at his mother's deathbed, Matousek's rage, longing, guilt and dread melt into acceptance and grief. In tandem with the private-eye manhunt, Matousek undergoes successful treatment for HIV infection. A searing meditation on the psychic harm suffered by men and women without fathers, this wise odyssey wrestles with questions of life and death and the search for the meaning of one's existence.

    • Library Journal

      February 15, 2000
      One Sunday night, when former Interview editor Matousek was four years old, his recently departed father came back to his mother's house to kidnap him--unsuccessfully. He never saw or heard from his father again, but 35 years later at the urging of his friend and editor, Matousek acknowledged that the time had come to seek him out. This is the author's account of that search and his coming to terms with his own anger and grief over his parents' divorce and his subsequent feelings of abandonment. Not only did Matousek learn the truth about himself and his extended family, which drew them closer, but he also freed himself to make a commitment to the man he loves and to making himself healthier. (They are both HIV positive.) This is an absorbing memoir that pulls the reader in like the best-written mystery.--Pam Kingsbury, Florence, AL

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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