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Jonathan Franzen's exhilarating novel The Corrections
tells a spellbinding story with sexy comic brio, and evokes a quirky family akin
to Anne Tyler's, only bitter. Franzen's great at describing Christmas
homecomings gone awry, cruise-ship follies, self-deluded academics,
breast-obsessed screenwriters, stodgy old farts and edgy Tribeca bohemians
equally at sea in their lives, and the mad, bad, dangerous worlds of the
Internet boom and the fissioning post-Soviet East.
All five members of the Lambert family get their due, as everybody's lives
swirl out of control. Paterfamilias Alfred is slipping into dementia, even as
one of his inventions inspires a pharmaceutical giant to revolutionize treatment
of his disease. His stubborn wife, Enid, specializes in denial; so do their
kids, each in an idiosyncratic way. Their hepcat son, Chip, lost a college
sinecure by seducing a student, and his new career as a screenwriter is in
peril. Chip's sister, Denise, is a chic chef perpetually in hot water,
romantically speaking; banker brother Gary wonders if his stifling marriage is
driving him nuts. We inhabit these troubled minds in turn, sinking into sorrow
punctuated by laughter, reveling in Franzen's satirical eye:
Gary in recent years had observed, with plate tectonically
cumulative anxiety, that population was continuing to flow out of the Midwest
and toward the cooler coasts.... Gary wished that all further migration [could]
be banned and all Midwesterners encouraged to revert to eating pasty foods and
wearing dowdy clothes and playing board games, in order that a strategic
national reserve of cluelessness might be maintained, a wilderness of taste
which would enable people of privilege, like himself, to feel extremely
civilized in perpetuity. Franzen is funny and on the money. This
book puts him on the literary map. --Tim Appelo |