The Imposters by Tom Rachman

A book about love, the power of art and what we leave behind.

Image | The Imposters by Tom Rachman

Caption: (Bond Street Books)

Dora Frenhofer, a once successful but now aging and embittered novelist, knows her mind is going. She is determined, however, to finish her final book, and reverse her fortunes, before time runs out. Alone in her London home during the pandemic, she creates, and is in turn created by, the fascinating real characters from her own life.
Like a twenty-first-century Scheherazade, Dora spins stories to ward off her end. From New Delhi to New York, Copenhagen to Los Angeles, Australia to Syria to Paris, Dora's chapters trot the globe, inhabiting the perspectives of her missing brother, her estranged daughter, her erstwhile lover, and her last remaining friend, among others in her orbit. As her own life comes into ever sharper focus, so do the signal events that have made her who she is, leaving us in Dora's thrall until, with an unforeseen twist, she snaps the final piece of the puzzle into place.
(From Bond Street Books)
Tom Rachman is an English-born, Vancouver-raised novelist and journalist. He has published three novels including his 2010 Giller Prize-nominated novel The Imperfectionists, and its follow-up The Rise & Fall of Great Powers.

Interviews with Tom Rachman