Wild Game: My Mother, Her Lover, and Me is a 2019 memoir by American author Adrienne Brodeur.[1] The book recounts how, at age 14 in 1980, Brodeur became her mother Malabar's confidante and accomplice in a decades-long affair with Ben Souther, the best friend of her father, exploring the emotional toll on their family and Brodeur's path to independence.[2]Published by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (Mariner Books imprint) on October 15, 2019, it became a national bestseller and was named one of the best books of the year by The New York Times, NPR, and People.[3] Brodeur, a literary agent and co-founder of the literary magazineZoetrope: All-Story, drew on her publishing background for the work.[4]The memoir received the 2020 Book Award for Nonfiction from the New EnglandSociety in the City of New York and has been praised for its examination of family secrets and mother-daughter dynamics.[5] Film rights were acquired by Chernin Entertainment in 2018, with a screenplay adaptation in development as of 2025.[6]
Author
Background
Adrienne Brodeur was born around 1967 in New York City to Paul Brodeur, a renowned staff writer for The New Yorker known for his investigative reporting on environmental and health hazards such as asbestos exposure, and Malabar Brodeur, a charismatic socialite, columnist, and cookbook author whose vibrant persona earned her the moniker "Malabar" in literary circles.[7][8][9] Her parents' marriage dissolved in divorce during her early childhood, a pivotal event that reshaped family life and led to her mother's remarriage in 1974 to financier Henry Hornblower II, a union that introduced new layers of complexity to household dynamics.[10][11]Brodeur's upbringing unfolded primarily in Manhattan, interspersed with idyllic yet tumultuous summers on Cape Cod, where the family's beach house became a backdrop for intimate revelations and shifting alliances. The early loss of her older brother, Christopher, who died at age two from choking before her birth, cast a long shadow over the household, fostering a sense of fragility and intensifying emotional bonds within the remaining family unit. These experiences, marked by parental separation, remarriage, and the weight of unspoken grief, cultivated a heightened awareness of relational intricacies from a young age.[12][13][14]Surrounded by her parents' literary pursuits—her father's exposés and her mother's culinary writings—Brodeur developed an early affinity for narrative and expression, influenced by the storytelling that permeated family interactions, from bedtime tales to candid confessions. This environment sparked her interest in literature, setting the stage for her academic path. In 1988, she graduated with a BA in urban studies from Columbia University, where she began honing her voice amid New York's cultural milieu. She later earned a Master of Public Administration (MPA) from the University of Pennsylvania in 1992.[15][16][16]
Career
Adrienne Brodeur began her publishing career after graduating from Columbia University, where she initially worked as a reader at The Paris Review. In 1997, she co-founded the literary magazine Zoetrope: All-Story with filmmaker Francis Ford Coppola, serving as its editor-in-chief from 1997 to 2002. Under her leadership, the magazine became one of the most celebrated periodicals for short fiction, winning the National Magazine Award for Fiction four times.[4][17][9]Following her tenure at Zoetrope, Brodeur held acquiring and editing positions at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt from 2005 to 2013, where she focused on literary fiction and memoirs. During this period, she published her debut novel, Man Camp, in 2005, a satirical work about modern relationships that received mixed reviews for its witty take on gender dynamics but was noted for its lighthearted accessibility rather than profound literary depth. She also co-edited two anthologies of stories from Zoetrope: All-Story, published in 2000 and 2003 by Harcourt.[4][9][18]In 2013, Brodeur joined Aspen Words, a literary nonprofit program of the Aspen Institute, initially as creative director before becoming executive director in 2016. In this role, she oversees strategic planning, budget, and programming to promote global literature and dialogue. A key achievement was launching the Aspen Words Literary Prize in 2017, an annual $35,000 award recognizing influential fiction that addresses vital contemporary issues through storytelling. Beyond these roles, Brodeur continued her writing career, releasing her second novel, Little Monsters, in 2023, which explores family secrets and human resilience in a coastal setting.[4][19][20]
Publication
Development
The conception of Wild Game stemmed from Adrienne Brodeur's decades-long entanglement with a family secret: her mother Malabar's affair with her stepfather's best friend, which began when Brodeur was 14 and profoundly shaped her life. This inspiration intensified as Brodeur became a mother herself, prompting her to confront the intergenerational patterns of secrecy to break the cycle for her own children. A pivotal reconciliation with her mother further catalyzed the project, enabling Brodeur to explore their fraught bond with newfound perspective and compassion.[21]Brodeur began writing the memoir in 2016, rising at 4:30 a.m. daily to draft before her family awoke, drawing on years of journaling and her mother's personal notes for authenticity. She completed the first draft by 2017 and delivered it to her agent, sparking a competitive auction that saw 14 publishers bid, with Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ultimately acquiring North American rights in a seven-figure deal.[21]The editorial process at Houghton Mifflin Harcourt spanned nine months of intensive revisions, aimed at refining the narrative's structure while preserving the raw vulnerability of Brodeur's recollections. Leveraging her extensive prior experience as a literary editor and co-founder of Zoetrope: All-Story, Brodeur navigated these changes to ensure emotional honesty without sensationalism.[21]Writing the memoir presented significant challenges, particularly the ethical complexities of portraying living family members and the risk of relational fallout. Brodeur emphasized self-scrutiny to avoid mere score-settling, adhering to memoir conventions that prioritize nuance over blame, and expressed apprehension about her family's reactions upon reading the finished work. She shared drafts selectively to gauge impacts and secure tacit approvals, ultimately framing the book as a path to forgiveness rather than accusation.[22]
Release
Wild Game was released on October 15, 2019, by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt in a hardcover edition of 256 pages, priced at $27.[3] A paperback edition followed on July 7, 2020, published by Mariner Books, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.[23] An audiobook version, narrated primarily by Julia Whelan with contributions from the author, was released concurrently with the hardcover through HarperAudio.[24]The book's rollout featured extensive promotional activities, including author book tours across the United States and special appearances at Aspen Words events, where Brodeur serves as executive director.[25] It was selected as a main pick by the Book of the Month club, boosting its visibility among reading communities.[26]International editions expanded the memoir's reach, with a UK publication by Chatto & Windus in January 2020 and a French translation titled Festin sauvage, released by JC Lattès in early 2020.[27][28] In its initial months, Wild Game achieved strong commercial performance, attaining national bestseller status.[29]
Content
Synopsis
Wild Game is a memoir by Adrienne Brodeur recounting her entanglement in her mother's clandestineaffair, spanning from her adolescence into adulthood. The narrative opens on a sweltering July night in 1980 on Cape Cod, when 14-year-old Brodeur is roused from sleep by her charismatic mother, Malabar, who breathlessly shares that she has fallen in love after being kissed by Ben Souther, a close family friend and the best friend of Brodeur's father, Charles. This revelation marks the beginning of a profound shift in their relationship, drawing the young Brodeur into her mother's emotional world.[2]Over the subsequent 12 years, Malabar's affair with Ben persists, evolving into a deeply secretive liaison that Brodeur actively helps sustain.[30] As her mother's trusted confidante, Brodeur assumes the role of accomplice, fabricating alibis, facilitating clandestine meetings, and offering unwavering emotional support to shield the relationship from discovery. This involvement transforms Brodeur from a daughter into a co-conspirator, binding her closely to Malabar while isolating her from other aspects of her life.[23]The affair's repercussions ripple through the family, exerting immense strain on Malabar's marriage to Charles and infiltrating Brodeur's own personal milestones. As Brodeur navigates her early adulthood, the ongoing secrecy contributes to tensions in her marriage, coincides with the births of her two children—her daughter Una and son George—and culminates in periods of profound depression and heated family confrontations that force reckonings with long-buried truths. These events underscore the pervasive impact of the deception on multiple generations.[31]The memoir culminates in Brodeur's introspective reflections on her complicity in the affair and the journey toward familyreconciliation, highlighting the enduring complexities of loyalty, betrayal, and forgiveness within intimate bonds. Through this lens, Brodeur examines how the secrets shaped her understanding of love and autonomy, ultimately seeking resolution amid the lingering effects of her mother's choices.[32]
Themes
In Wild Game, Adrienne Brodeur explores the central theme of maternal enmeshment through her portrayal of a mother-daughter relationship that blurs emotional boundaries from a young age. At 14, Brodeur becomes her mother Malabar's confidante and accomplice in a long-term affair, sacrificing her own childhood autonomy to fulfill her mother's emotional needs and maintain the secrecy of the liaison.[33] This dynamic exemplifies parentification, where Brodeur assumes adult responsibilities, such as orchestrating cover stories and providing counsel, which stunts her personal development and fosters a codependent bond marked by devotion and manipulation.[8] Brodeur reflects that this enmeshment stemmed from her desire for her mother's attention, transforming her from daughter to co-conspirator in a deception that spanned over a decade.[34]Recurring motifs of food and feasting serve as metaphors for indulgence, excess, and underlying deception throughout the memoir. Malabar's elaborate meals and culinary experiments, often shared during gatherings that mask the affair, symbolize the seductive allure of forbidden pleasures while concealing familial betrayals; for instance, the preparation of wild game dishes becomes a literal and figurative cover for illicitrendezvous.[35] These scenes highlight how gastronomic rituals reinforce the family's facade of normalcy, with Brodeur noting that her mother's proposed cookbook project provided a convenient pretext for the ongoing intrigue.[10]The memoir delves into the tension between loyalty and truth, examining the psychological consequences of complicity in sustained lies. Brodeur's unwavering allegiance to her charismatic yet narcissistic mother leads to profound emotional isolation, as the burden of secrecy erodes trust in her own relationships and perpetuates a cycle of self-deception.[8] This conflict manifests in the long-term toll on her psyche, including anxiety and relational difficulties, underscoring how loyalty to a parent can demand the suppression of personal integrity.[33]Broader reflections on forgiveness and breaking intergenerational cycles form a redemptive arc in the narrative, as Brodeur confronts the patterns of dysfunction inherited from her family. Through writing the memoir, she cultivates empathy for Malabar's vulnerabilities, shifting from resentment to understanding and forgiving both her mother and herself for their roles in the deception.[34] Motivated by motherhood, Brodeur resolves to halt the transmission of these secrets to her own children, emphasizing the memoir's role in processing trauma and fostering healthier relational boundaries.[35]
Reception
Critical response
Wild Game received widespread critical acclaim for its exploration of family dynamics and personal betrayal, with reviewers praising its narrative craftsmanship and emotional honesty. Kirkus Reviews awarded it a starred review, commending the "candid, deftly crafted narrative" that vividly reveals the family secrets burdening the author's life from adolescence, particularly her role as confidante in her mother's affair.[36] The New York Times highlighted the memoir's emotional depth, describing it as a "gorgeously written" account with "deep insight and unrelenting narrative tension" that captures the author's decades-long struggle to break free from her mother's influence.[3]Critics frequently compared Wild Game to other acclaimed memoirs addressing familial betrayal, such as Tara Westover's Educated, noting shared themes of escaping toxic parental bonds and confronting inherited dysfunction.[37] This positioning underscores the book's resonance in contemporary literary discussions of intergenerational trauma, where Brodeur's story echoes Westover's in its unflinching examination of a daughter's quest for autonomy amid parental manipulation.While predominantly positive, some reviews pointed to minor limitations in the memoir's approach to character portrayal. The Guardian observed that Brodeur exercises notable restraint in depicting her mother, portraying her as both perpetrator and victim of her own abusive upbringing, which tempers potential outrage and maintains a gracious tone throughout.[27] This sympathetic undercurrent, while adding nuance, occasionally softens the critique of the mother's narcissism, leading to a polished yet somewhat contained exploration of the central conflict.
Awards and honors
Wild Game received widespread recognition following its release, earning placements on several prominent "best books" lists for 2019. It was named one of NPR's Best Books of 2019, praised for its intimate exploration of family dynamics and secrets.[38] The memoir also appeared on The Washington Post's list of 50 notable works of nonfiction for the year, highlighted for its lurid yet eloquent depiction of a mother's affair and the daughter's involvement.[39] Additionally, it was selected as one of Amazon's 10 Best Books of 2019 in the memoir category, noted for its engaging narrative of betrayal and complicity.[40] People magazine included it among the best fall books of 2019, commending its dramatic storytelling.[40] Oprah Daily featured it in its 33 must-read books of fall 2019, emphasizing its coming-of-age elements amid family turmoil.[41]The book was nominated for the Goodreads Choice Awards in the Memoir & Autobiography category in 2019, where it garnered significant reader votes but did not win.[42] It won the 2020 New England Society Book Award in the Nonfiction: Biography/Memoir category.[43]Commercially, Wild Game achieved strong sales success, with an initial print run of 100,000 copies in the United States, reflecting high expectations from publisher Houghton Mifflin Harcourt.[44] The memoir became a national bestseller, contributing to its broad audience and cultural impact.
Adaptations
Film project
In 2018, Chernin Entertainment acquired the film rights to Adrienne Brodeur's memoir Wild Game, with screenwriter and director Kelly Fremon Craig initially attached to adapt the story of a complex mother-daughter relationship embroiled in secrecy and betrayal.[6] By 2024, the project had evolved, with Nick Hornby penning the screenplay and Deniz Gamze Ergüven, director of the Oscar-nominated Mustang, attached to helm the film, focusing on the intricate dynamics between Brodeur's character and her charismatic yet manipulative mother.[45][46]Brodeur has been involved in the adaptationprocess, having reviewed early drafts and providing input to ensure fidelity to the memoir's emotional core, though she has noted the typical challenges of Hollywood development, including setbacks that have prolonged progress.[37][45] As of 2024, the film remains in development under Chernin Entertainment with no confirmed release date, casting announcements, or production start.[45]
Potential media expansions
The audiobook adaptation of Wild Game, released in 2019 by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt Audio and narrated primarily by Julia Whelan with an introduction by author Adrienne Brodeur, has been lauded for deepening the memoir's emotional resonance through Whelan's compassionate yet objective delivery.[47] Reviewers noted that the narration amplifies the intimacy of the mother-daughter bond and the weight of family secrets, making the audio format a vital extension of the print experience.[47]A 2021 Audible conversation between Brodeur and Whelan, featured as bonus audio content, explores the challenges of adapting personal narratives for audio, subtly opening discussions on broader audio expansions like serialized formats or enhanced storytelling techniques.[48] While no formal podcast or stage versions have been announced as of 2024, these talks underscore the memoir's adaptability to performative media, aligning with Brodeur's background in literary programming.