Departure(s)
| Published | 2026-01-20 |
| Series | Standalone |
| Genre | Domestic Fiction |
| Language | English |
| Publisher | 0593804503 |
| ISBN-10 | 0593804503 |
| ISBN-13 | 9780593804506 |
πHonest Review
The main plot is really about these two friends of his named Stephen and Jean. Julian played matchmaker for them when they were all at university back in the nineteen sixties. They fell in love and then they had a really messy breakup which made Julian feel insulted for some reason. The crazy part is that they find each other again forty years later and try to make it work a second time.
Barnes mixes his own real life with made up stuff so well that you never really know what is a true memory and what is just fiction. He actually promised his friends he would never write about them but he breaks that promise to give us this story. You can tell he is just tired and thinking a lot about death and what it all means. It is definitely a heavy read. There are some parts that are surprisingly funny but mostly it just makes you think about getting older and how your own body eventually turns against you.
I honestly felt pretty sad when I finished it. It feels exactly like sitting in a room with an old man who knows he is running out of time and just wants to get a few last things off his chest. If this really is his last book then it is a beautiful way to say goodbye to his readers.
Summary:
This is supposed to be the last book Julian Barnes will ever write. It follows a writer named Julian who has an incurable blood cancer. He breaks a promise to two old friends named Stephen and Jean by writing about their love story. He introduced them back in college and then watched them break up and then get back together forty years later. It is all about memory and aging and the things we leave behind.
β What I Liked
I really liked how honest he is about aging and death. He does not try to sugarcoat it at all. He just talks about how much it sucks to watch your body break down and your friends pass away.
β What Could Be Better
It wanders around a lot. Sometimes he just goes off on these long tangents about random thoughts and you kind of wish he would just get back to the story about Stephen and Jean.
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