Come With Me, Helen Schulman’s sixth novel, is a feat of both craft and storytelling. On the surface it is about a suburban family: the parents, Amy and Dan, are dealing with middle-age ennui, midlife unemployment, and marital resentments, their adolescent son Jack is navigating long distance love and hometown friendships, and Theo and Miles are much younger, behaviorally-challenged twins. Each of these main players has their own narrative along with a quirky, interesting supporting cast. Altogether they comprise six to eight stories (depending on your perspective), with just as many themes—reality, regret and reconciliation, consciousness and conscience, free will versus destiny, to name a few—that seamlessly intertwine into one that should engross and enchant every type of reader—from those who love a page-turner to literature lovers to philosophical thinkers.
Set in Silicon Valley, Donny, a Mark Zuckerberg wannabe, has a start-up that’s creating goggles to access multiverses, essentially parallel universes where our life plays out differently. He uses Amy to test the goggles, and through them she virtually experiences alternative realities wrought by alternative choices. Dan, on the other hand, upends his here and now to forge a new life that he experiences in real time. Schulman juxtaposes these scenarios to delve into whether the answers to "what if" impact the present and how they change us. If this sounds sci-fi-y, it isn’t, though it is by turns cool and terrifying, adjectives which also apply to the day-to-day circumstances these exquisitely flawed yet wholly sympathetic characters are plunked into, evoking in each of them our least and most flattering qualities, motives, and impulses.
Come With Me resonates as an exploration of personal responsibility and fidelity, as an examination of the ethical quandaries imposed by technology’s rapidly changing frontiers, and as a pleasurable, easy to read escape into someone else’s dysfunctional family. One thing is certain: in this and every multiverse Schulman has gifted us with an(other) enduring, relevant work of fiction!