The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mom goes on midlife adventure

- By Jenny Shank Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

Midway through life’s journey, Dante Alighieri roadtrippe­d through hell, Walter White ditched teaching science to become a meth maestro and the unnamed 45-year-old narrator of Miranda July’s “All Fours” tells her husband and child she’s driving from L.A. to New York for work appointmen­ts. Instead, she pulls off the highway after 20 miles, books a nondescrip­t motel room in Monrovia, California, and blows a $20,000 windfall redecorati­ng it so she can hunker there for an eventful fortnight.

Midlife crises, when celebrated in popular culture, tend to belong to men. But July’s witty, probing romp of a novel asks: How should a woman respond to a similar punch of yearning, seize-the-dayism and death-dread?

The narrator is a successful, “semi-famous” artist creating transgress­ive work, married to a man named Harris and parent to 7-year-old Sam. She loves and values them, yet feels stifled.

While in Monrovia, she meets an attractive younger man, Danny, who works at Hertz but harbors artistic visions and is a fan of her work. She hires Danny’s wife to redecorate her motel room in opulent splendor.

She and Danny struggle against their powerful attraction, but “All Fours,” animated by July’s winning voice and what-could-happen-thatwould-be-weirder plot instinct, turns out to be more surprising, bracing and extraordin­ary than a simple affair.

Still, the narrator doesn’t discount the people who succumb to the mundane midlife narrative. Maybe “a few silly men in red convertibl­es” gave midlife crises “a bad name. I imagined greeting such a man solemnly: I see you have reached a time of great questionin­g. God be with you, seeker.”

“All Fours” is rife with unexpected seduction, inventive sex and sex-adjacent acts that are somehow racier. The frankness with which the narrator delves into perimenopa­use and menopause is a revelation. July’s work has frequently been described as whimsical or twee, but those adjectives can’t convey the molten core of this book, which is at once hilarious and dead serious.

Girls who grew up in the ‘80s passing around Judy Blume’s “Are You There, God? It’s Me, Margaret,” now midlife women, should share “All Fours” for its attention to many of the same questions: What’s going to happen to me? What should I do about it? What does it all mean?

The responses July’s narrator uncovers, so particular and unexpected, might propel readers forward to discover their own answers.

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