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Review: Revolutionary Road, Richard Yates

Frank and April Wheeler are desperately unhappy.  Married for the sake of their children, living lives that they believe are meaningless, in a suburban town full of similar ordinary couples, they are both clamoring inwardly for a change.  They believe they are superior to their neighbors and are determined to prove it.  April comes up with the genius idea of uprooting and moving to France, where she can work and Frank can find the intellectual fulfillment that he’s always longed for.  Unfortunately, this plan sets the couple on a path to their own personal tragedy.

This is a deft, amazing book.  Frank and April despair at the ordinariness of their neighbors in the suburbs, lamenting the blandness and sameness of their lives, but the reader knows better.  Yates treats us to an inside view of the Wheelers’ closest neighbors, and we learn that one of their friends mistakenly believes he is in love with April, while the other older couple has a son committed to a mental institution.  When that son starts to espouse the same views that Frank and April have, we begin to realize that everyone is slightly off-kilter here.  Everyone is unhappy and dissatisfied.  Frank and April are deluded by their own aspirations into thinking that they’re better than their neighbors, when really they quite simply belong.  They believe they’re extraordinary, but over the course of the novel, we realize that they are perfectly ordinary.  They fit right in.

It is certainly those ordinary characters that succeed as the huge draw for this novel.  Their humanity is overwhelmingly real.  Frank, for example, is insufferably arrogant at times, and totally misguided about almost everyone he interacts with, but few people set him straight.  Worse, he says one thing and thinks another.  He claims to want to go to France and find himself, but it becomes clear very early on that he’s actually quite satisfied with his job.  He’s bored but he doesn’t want to disturb the status quo; he believes he is special, but he isn’t going to put forth the effort to actually prove it.  Perhaps he knows it isn’t true, even as he’s unwilling to admit it.  April seeks to recapture something with her acting and briefly succeeds, only to become an embarrassing failure when she doesn’t actually prove to be as spectacular as she’d hoped.  Their lives are empty and they are always seeking, but never finding.

Of course, the book is very well written, and in the one instance that I’d have loved to share passages, the book had to go back to the library.  Regardless, I could easily place myself in these characters’ shoes and there wasn’t anything that threw me out of the story.  The eeriest part about it is that Revolutionary Road makes us think about our own lives and those of our neighbors.  Frank and April are still very relevant almost fifty years on as people consistently search for meaning in their lives.  It often seems that we are all on a quest for fulfillment and in that respect, this book’s message is haunting, reminding us to seek happiness in what we have and not what is constantly out of reach.

*I am an Amazon Associate. I borrowed this book from the library.

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The Sunday Salon: NaNoWriMo

tssbadge1Yesterday, I said I was starting my participation in NaNoWriMo today.  And I have officially begun.  I wrote 2000 words this morning, so I’m off to a good start.  If anyone would like to add me as a buddy over there, please do – my username is medievalbookworm.  I’m writing a historical romance novel for two reasons; I always thought I could, and I know how it will end, which has always stymied me in the past when writing longer works of fiction.  If I know the ending, surely I will be able to somehow get the novel there.  I just want to see how it goes and that involves choosing the easiest genre (for me) to write.  Although to be honest I wouldn’t be surprised if mine was the tamest romance ever – I prefer the ones without explicit scenes, believe it or not.  I don’t particularly want anyone to read it, but I’m happy that it’s moving along nicely and I found it fairly easy to write.  In fact, I might even write more later, as the feeling is surprisingly exhilarating.

In other bookish news, I have plenty to read these days.  I have a library loot post coming up this week with several weeks’ worth of loot, but my most exciting find was Kazuo Ishiguro’s new short story collection, Nocturnes.  How can I resist Ishiguro?  He’s one of my favorite authors and I had a moment of absolute glee when I saw it in the new book section.  I don’t think these stories are going to stay unread for very long.  I also finished Ash by Malinda Lo last night and I unexpectedly adored it, so I’m for once looking forward to writing a review.  I was feeling frustrated with my reading last week, but I think all I needed was a change of pace, reading what I want to read rather than what I need to review.  I think if I intersperse reading that I choose with the review copies, things will go much more smoothly.  In all honesty I don’t have very many books for review – I’ve stopped requesting at all and only accept if I think a book will be very good – so this should not be a challenge.  So, today I’m going to be reading Nocturnes and Heart’s Blood by Juliet Marillier, and after I’m finished with them I will try and go back to read a review copy.

I’m not sure which books will be ahead this week; I’m just going to see how I feel.  What are you planning on reading this week?

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