The Line, The Road to Memphis, and Estrela do Mar follow three men at different stages of life who must confront the cost of distance - emotional, moral, and geographic - and learn that endurance without presence is its own form of failure.
These three linked novellas examine the mythology of masculine competence-the belief that steadiness, endurance, and provision are enough.
In The Line, a boarding-school year tests a father's assumption that strength can be outsourced and a son's belief that control equals maturity. In The Road to Memphis, a long-haul trucker learns that distance cannot erase moral entanglement. In Estrela do Mar, a young man at sea confronts the isolation beneath romantic notions of freedom.
Across vastly different landscapes-New England boarding school, Southern freight corridors, Atlantic shipping lanes-each story interrogates the same question: what remains of a man when motion, discipline, and silence are no longer sufficient?