Departures, Julian Barnes
Departures, Julian Barnes
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Departure(s)

Author: Julian Barnes

Narrator: Julian Barnes

Unabridged: 5 hr 2 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 01/20/2026


Synopsis

On the occasion of his eightieth birthday, one of our great novelists delivers a playful and profound work about memory, love, and the writer's endgame.

“A culmination . . . shimmering with [Barnes’s] silky, erudite prose; beneath the suave surface is an earnest investigation into the mysterious ways of the human heart.” —The Atlantic

Shortly after our narrator, a writer named Julian, begins this compact book by discussing the workings of involuntary memory, he interrupts himself with a bulletin to the reader: "There will be a story—or a story within the story—but not just yet.”

Of course, whether Departure(s) is mostly fiction or not, there is a lot of its author in it, including Barnes's reckoning with the blood disorder he has been living with since he was diagnosed in 2020, his long preoccupation with dying and grief, and his mordant sense of the indignities and lost opportunities we're prey to in love. The story he promises to deliver is a love story, that of two friends he met at university in the 1960s, that time of touted but rarely experienced sexual freedom. Julian played matchmaker to Stephen (tall, gangling, uncertain) and Jean (tart and attractive); as the third wheel he was deeply invested in the success of their love and insulted when they broke up. Time is swift, and forty years later, he tries again, watching as their rekindled affair produces joys, betrayals, and disappointments of a different order.

"Life and memory can be so . . . quixotic, don't you find?" Barnes uses both his novelistic memory and his (real?) personal diary entries to examine not just the quixotic relationship of Jean and Stephen but his writer's eye upon it, and how his efforts in their behalf add up in the end. Having promised them he'd never write about them, he breaks the promise to fulfill one, amply, to his readers, in this delightful and poignant novelist’s game that only Julian Barnes knows how to play.

About The Author

JULIAN BARNES is the author of twenty-five previous books, for which he has received the Man Booker Prize, the Somerset Maugham Award, the E. M. Forster Award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters, the Prix Médicis and Prix Femina in France, and the Jerusalem Prize. In 2017 he was awarded the Légion d’honneur. His work has been translated into more than forty languages. He lives in London.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Jill on November 24, 2025

Julian Barnes mentions two things at the beginning of his latest book: there will be a story – or a story within a story – but not just yet; and this will be his last book. As promised, there is indeed a story that might be fiction, or may be autobiographical, but most certainly is metafiction. There......more

Goodreads review by Liz on November 18, 2025

I need people to read this; I am SOBBING and need to know if that is normal.......more

Goodreads review by A Dreaming Bibliophile on December 23, 2025

Thanks to NetGalley and Knopf, Pantheon, Vintage and Anchor for providing me with an eARC. This was a very interesting book. It's mostly in a stream of consciousness/rambling thoughts format but in this case I think it worked well, given the author's situation. The title worked out quite well too --......more

Goodreads review by A. on October 17, 2025

Thank you to Knopf and NetGalley for the ARC of Departure(s). After about 10 pages of reading this book, I had to quickly look back at the title page to assure myself that I was reading a novel. I even went online and looked up the title just to make sure. “Departure(s): A Novel” the browser said in......more

Goodreads review by Elisha on September 19, 2025

Departure(s) begins by delving into the many theorists behind IAM’s and HSAM - both of these things being conditions believed to provide people with the ability to recall things beyond ‘normal’ ability. Julian Barnes questions, would you if you had the choice want to know absolutely everything about......more


Quotes

“[Barnes] has not merely blurred the line between fact and fiction; he has expunged it. . . . skillfully weaving in thoughts on love, on aging, on writing fiction, on preparing for death. It’s a virtuoso performance.” The Washington Post

“Thoughtful and dynamic.” Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

“A culmination . . . shimmering with [Barnes’s] silky, erudite prose; beneath the suave surface is an earnest investigation into the mysterious ways of the human heart.” The Atlantic

“Proustian in both focus and scope, Barnes’ philosophical flights are . . . reminiscent of W. G. Sebald, but with a warmth, humanity, and humor that are distinctly his own. . . . This is a rewarding and profound exploration of the human condition from a deeply captivating writer.” Booklist (starred review)

“Barnes explores memory, identity, and aging in this elegiacal and witty metafictional novella. . . . [and] remains in top form. Readers with a penchant for the precise prose of Ian McEwan or the collage metafiction of Sigrid Nunez will love his latest.” Library Journal (starred review)

“A revelatory meditation on love, death, and memory. . . . Barnes dives headlong into the slippery nature of memory and what one forgets through time or necessity. It’s an understated but graceful valediction by a writer whose work won’t soon be forgotten.”Publishers Weekly

“An autofictional remembrance. . . . Questioning the merits of novel-writing as an endeavor, the way it prompts the writer to exaggerate and betray. . . . It’s clear that Barnes is writing with a certain urgency.”Kirkus Reviews