by Jeffrey EugenidesFic Eugenides, Jeffrey
Jeffrey Eugenides has written three novels. The Virgin Suicides was turned into a popular indie film. Middlesex won the Pulitzer prize in fiction, and with The Marriage Plot he creates a modern telling of Austen and other Regency novel writers. The main plot behind those and this novel is coming of age and falling in love and getting married. The idea is that marriage is the plot and is what is at stake.
Swapping out 1800s England with early 1980s New England, we find 3 characters who take turns narrating their own tales. There is Madeleine who is the object of affection of two suitors, Leonard and Mitchell. Leonard is a brilliant, manic depressive from the Pacific Northwest, and Mitchell is a Religious Studies major from Detroit. Leonard is tall and meaty and Mitchell is skinny and Greek. The novel's beginning finds them on graduation day but a lot of the book you will find yourself at some future point and then back story is told to get you back to that point. I found this structure to be rather beautifully constructed when it deals with its characters, but it dragged on me when it slipped into small Wikipedia entries about random things like semiotics, eastern religion, gene-splicing, and depression.
The characters do not live in a Jane Austen world and no simple resolution will do for them. These are smart but young people who are looking for a way to live in the world and have an idea of what they want and do not want but no idea of how to obtain it or if it will make them happy.
I enjoyed this book and I wish Eugenides was a faster writer so we could possibly see these characters again in another decade when they are in their forties. If you are looking for a sprawling character study book with overly bright New Englanders to fill your post-Jonathan Franzen Freedom hangover then look no further.



