Wednesday, January 4, 2012

The Marriage Plot

One of my new year's resolutions is to "enrich my life through literature and music".  To complete the lit portion of this pledge I hope to read a book every ten days.  So far, I'm on track, having recently finished Jeffrey Eugenides' latest work, The Marriage Plot.

I got this novel from both my mother, and one of my aunts, tipping you off, dear readers, to how much it seems suited to me.

For starters, I've been a fan of Eugenides before.  While most people may recognize his name in association with The Virgin Suicides, I was much more impressed with Eugenides' second work, MiddleSex, in which he explores the issue of gender identity, surrounded, of course, by the many branching issues that come with it.  The book won a pulitzer prize, and for good reason.  Its a challenging read, but one that makes you feel super intelligent while perusing its pages.

Moving on to E's latest work!  If I may, the hook on the front flap of the cover is the reason I knew I had to read this book, and likely the reason my mum and her sister chose it for me as well:

"Its the early 1980s - the country is in a deep recession, and life after college is harder than ever.  In the cafes on College Hill, the wised-up kids are inhaling Derrida and listening to Talking Heads.  But Madeleine Hanna, dutiful English major, is writing her senior thesis on Jane Austen and George Eliot, purveyors of the marriage plot that lies at the heart of the greatest English novels."


The protagonist of this novel is me!

After having read more than just the front flap of The Marriage Plot, however, I have to admit that this description is a little bit misleading.  While Madeleine starts off super into Victorian Lit, and comes back around to it in the end, she spends a fair chunk of the text getting into the philosophical stuff her fellow students are getting into.  This is ok though, as Madeleine's academic leanings aren't the point of Eugenides' work anyways.

Amazingly, this novel is a tongue-in-cheek 21st century version of its title, of the "marriage plot" from Pride and Prejudice, Sense and Sensibility, Middlemarch and so many others.  At the same time, its an exploration on feminism (which I always love), gender stereotypes, religion, sexuality, mental health and RELATIONSHIPS. (and the list goes on).

Along with Madeleine, we follow the college and post-college lives of her boyfriend and eventual husband Leonard- a brilliant-minded science student who suffers from manic depression, and religious studies student Mitchell, who falls in love with Madeleine from day one and spends his year after graduation backpacking across Europe and then India with his roommate from college.  Its a love triangle of sort, but a complex one, complicated by several of the issues I mentioned above.

I have to say that Mitchell's storyline is a little bit cliche, in that he does some lily-pad hopping to and from religions, but is never able to overcome his own ego to give over to the whole "more than me" concept that seems to centre many of them.  He is at times a bit of a dog in his treatment of women, but in the end makes an incredibly gentleman-like decision that made the whole book worth reading.

Madeleine isn't the most likeable character, but I liked her.  Throughout the novel, she makes both admirable and stupid decisions, so if she's not typically "likeable", she's at least believable.  I saw many aspects of myself in her character as well, which always does the trick for getting a reader into her reading material.

Leonard, for me, is one of the more interesting characters- which is saying something, because he's a boring lump for most of the text.  The reality of the situation is that Leonard is in a depressive state for a huge chunk of the novel, and only twice (compared to many more times for Madeleine and Mitchell) do we get a window into his side of things.  I think Eugenides does an admirable job of portraying a character dealing with a mental illness, which is not something that is easy to do.  I've got some huge empathetic feelings towards Leonard, and I really respected the way that E represented Leonard's journey with his disease, and how it effects the people around him.

So while the novel may not necessarily be worth reading if looking at characters alone, the "hot topics" that Eugenides explores through these characters are. We get so many angles: stereotypes and stigmas are enforced, then subverted- they are turned on their heads, made fun of, and ultimately left up in the air. I love it.

The Marriage Plot is not your typical Victorian novel; its not your typical love story.  It is, however, a captivating and thought-provoking read that can definitely find a place in your heart- if you let it.

2 comments:

  1. I'm so jazzed you reviewed this book! I was looking at it at Indigo the other day totally intrigued but not sure what the book would really be about (beyond what I could read on the inside flap!) Now I'm even more excited to read it!

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  2. Good luck with that lofty book goal!

    I don't think I'll be reading this one anytime soon as it's not really in my genre. But I think it's pretty funny that both your Mom & Aunt bought it for you. Well done!

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