“It’s impossible to get a single
answer from the past. It’s not a key to anything. It’s just a place we go to
trick ourselves.”
Andrea and Julián haven’t seen one
another in twenty-one years—not since that tragic, fateful night their senior
year of high school that marked their group of friends forever. A shocking
phone call brings the two together again in Houston, where they begin to unravel
the truth of that year, picking open long scabbed-over wounds from their
upper-class adolescence in 1990s Bolivia and the scandal that ripped them apart.
A writer unhappy in his career and
his marriage, Julián has been novelizing the past for his next book, trying to
make meaning out of the events that changed the course of their lives forever. “I’d
thought that writing about that time would free me, relieve the burden of the
invisible years,” he writes, “but often it seems that it’s done the reverse.”
Juxtaposing the naïve invincibility of adolescence with the grasping uncertainties
of adulthood, Invisible Years deftly weaves a coming-of-age tale that
leaves the reader hanging on every word, even as they know how the cards fall
in the end.