Chris reviewed Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides
None
4 stars
This is a classic novel in the classic American novel sense, not some postmodern thing full of joky references and artificial limitations. Although the PoV character's sex is undoubtedly the point of controversion the first half of the novel at least is the history of a Greek-American family from emigration just after WWI up until the 1970s when the third generation of the family in the US is growing up. And as this it is quite probably Eugenides' own family though how much I don't know. I seem to recognise the author also in his comments about San Francisco being 'where young Americans go to retire' - Eugenides has said elsewhere that his five years spent in that city in his late 20s - early 30s, before he moved to New York, were a waste of time. One could feel the same if one had moved from an outer …
This is a classic novel in the classic American novel sense, not some postmodern thing full of joky references and artificial limitations. Although the PoV character's sex is undoubtedly the point of controversion the first half of the novel at least is the history of a Greek-American family from emigration just after WWI up until the 1970s when the third generation of the family in the US is growing up. And as this it is quite probably Eugenides' own family though how much I don't know. I seem to recognise the author also in his comments about San Francisco being 'where young Americans go to retire' - Eugenides has said elsewhere that his five years spent in that city in his late 20s - early 30s, before he moved to New York, were a waste of time. One could feel the same if one had moved from an outer suburb, where one's self was bound to wordless exile for six years, back to a proper city.
Eugenides' most recent novel is also getting some spotlight for having an apparent portrait of the much-missed David Foster Wallace as one of its main characters though in Middlesex the narrator's brother (strangely called "Chapter Eleven"*) is similar to the later fictional character (and not necessarily that much like DFW any more than to any number of brainy, counter-cultural midwesterners).
The sex thing is interesting and works as a character driver for confused Cal/Callie, and then the whole book is about split identity and whether you can't in fact be two things - male and female, American and Greek. The thing about presidents and their names - this was written pre-Obama but Obama does seem to bear it out (cf. Dukakis, a contender with an odd name with plenty of vowels in it being an exemplar of the idea that anyone could, really, be President. Alas Michael D didn't make it but he could be seen as an Obama-precursor). * this seems to have to do with his bro's later bankruptcy, i.e. 'filing for Chapter 11'.