Robert Boswell

Mystery Ride


MYSTERY RIDE spent three weeks on the PW best seller list. It made the Chicago Tribune Best Books of the year list.

Publishers Weekly: Robert Boswell, Mystery Ride
Boswell's memorable first novel, Crooked Hearts, about a dsyfunctional family, established his reputation on the literary scene...This new work makes a brilliant return to the subject Boswell writes about with distinctive tenderness and humor: a marriage that has fractured, although the love husband and wife once felt for each other endures as a touchstone in their lives. The novel reflects Boswell's increasing maturity and wisdom; its characters--especially an exasperating teenager--are vivid and fresh, its truths poignant and penetrating. The "Mystery Ride" (from a Springsteen song) is marriage, and here is "the almost inexhaustible mystery of love found and lost." Brimming with high ideals, Angela and Stephen Landis wed in the '60s and moved to a farm in Iowa, where their daughter Dulcie was born. Later, desperate for a life outside the confines of the farm and its small community, Angela left Stephen. She has remarried, and Dulcie is a rebellious, almost dangerously unstable adolescent when Angela returns to the farm for the first time in a decade to leave the fractious 15-year-old with her father. As Boswell cross-cuts among different events over a 20-year span, he draws a nuanced portrait of decent people striving to connect with each other. A fundamentalist Christian couple in the farm community is sketched with as much empathy as Angela's second, philandering husband and Stephen's understanding girlfriend. Boswell's compassion for his characters, his coherent control of motivation and plot, help him build to a series of tremendously affecting events, followed by Dulcie's quiet epiphany and an unforgettable ending. The dialogue has wit and energy, and the details of farm routine are rendered with impressive authenticity. Most important, the book is charged with insight, resonating with questions about how one leads a moral, fulfilling life and accepts the mystery of love.

Library Journal: Robert Boswell MYSTERY RIDE
Life, indeed, can be a mystery ride. Who can explain the bonds that hold us together when the odds so often seem stacked against us? The answer lies best in works by novelists like Boswell, whose latest effort focuses on an American family separated by time, distance, and generation. Angela Vorda and Stephen Landis have been divorced for ten years. Remarried, she lives and works in Los Angeles; single, with a live-in woman friend, he owns a small farm in Iowa. Their daughter, Dulcie, lives with her mother and suffers from more than the usual teenage angst. In an attempt to straighten out Dulcie, Angela arranges for her to spend the summer with Stephen. Struggling to adjust to these changed circumstances, both Dulcie and her father learn some important truths about life and love. Combining wisdom, humor, and poignancy in equal measure, this well-told tale inexorably draws in the reader. Highly recommended.

Published Works

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Story Collections
The Heyday of the Insensitive Bastards

Published by Graywolf Press, April 2009
Living to Be 100

Published by Knopf in 1994. Paperback published by HarperCollins in 1995.
Dancing in the Movies

Selected by Tim O'Brien as the Winner of the Iowa Prize in 1985 Published by the University of Iowa Press in 1986. Paperback edition from New American Library published in 1987.
Nonfiction
The Half-Known World

Essays on the writing of fiction. Published by Graywolf in 2008
What Men Call Treasure: The Search for Gold at Victorio Peak

Co-written with David Schweidel. Finalist for the 2008 Western Writers of America Best Work of Nonfiction. Published by Cinco Puntos Press in 2008.
Novels
Century's Son

Published in 2002 by Knopf Paperback published in 2003 by Picador
American Owned Love

Published by Knopf in 1997. Paperback published by HarperPerennial in 1998
Mystery Ride

Published by Knopf in 1993. Paperback published by HarperCollins in 1994.
The Geography of Desire

Published by Knopf in 1989. Paperback published by HarperCollins in 1994.
Crooked Hearts

Published by Knopf in 1987. Paperback published by HarperCollins in 1988.
Virtual Death

Published by HarperPrism, 1995
Plays
Tongues

Winner of the John Gassner Prize First performed by American Southwest Theatre Company in 1999