Go Ask Your Father
Auteur : Lennard J. Davis
Date de publication : 2009
Ăditeur : Bantam Books
Nombre de pages : 227
Résumé du livre
Every family has a secret. But what if that secret makes you question your own place in the family? Mixing equal parts memoir, detective story, and popular-science narrative, this is the emotionally charged account of one manâs quest to find out the truth about his genetic heritageâand confront the agonizing possibility of having to redefine the first fifty years of his life.
Shortly before his fatherâs death, Lennard Davis received a cryptic call from his uncle Abie, who said he had a secret he wanted to tell him one day. When finally revealed, the secretâthat Abie himself was Davisâs father, via donor inseminationâseemed too preposterous to be true. Born in 1949, Davis wasnât even sure that artificial insemination had existed at that time. Moreover, his uncle was mentally unstable, an unreliable witness to the past. Davis tried to erase the whole episode from his mind.
Yet it wouldnât disappear. As a child, Davis had always felt oddly out of place in his family. Could Abieâs story explain why? Over time Davisâs doubts grew into an obsession, until finally, some twenty years after Abieâs phone call, he launched an investigationâone that took him to DNA labs and online genealogical research sites, and into intense conversations with family members whose connection to him he had begun to doubt.
At once an absorbing personal journey and a fascinating intellectual foray into the little-known history of artificial insemination and our millennia-long attempt to understand the mysteries of sexual reproduction, Davisâs quest challenges us to ask who we are beyond a mere collection of genes. And as the possibility of finding the truth comes tantalizingly within reach, with Davis facing the agonizing possibility of having to reenvision his early years and his relationships with those closest to him, his search turns into a moving meditation on the nature of family bonds, as well as a new understanding of the significance of the swarms of chemicals that are the blueprints for our very human selves.