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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Adam Berendt Who are You?,
By
This review is from: Middle Age: A Romance
Almost immediately, at the very beginning of Joyce Carol Oates, "Middle Age, A Romance," you come upon her dedication which reads: "To my Princeton friends, who are nowhere in these pages." Oates is, of course a professor of Humanities at Princeton University.More importantly, this dedication serves as Oates notice to her readers that the characters in "Middle Age" are a breed, a type, of a world... apart from herself and her friends. She is setting up a barrier between herself and her characters. As a general rule, in most cases this would not be a good sign for the reading to come. But because Oates has proven to be masterfull at best and interesting at least we take the dedication with a grain of salt and read on. "Middle Age" is Oates ode to middle age among a tightly-knit group of mostly wealthy residents of Salthill-on-Hudson in upstate New York. The catalyst for the various stories is one Adam Berendt whose death prompts a flood of tears and concern among the women and men of Salthill that propells the novel through it's various chapters. Add to this the fact that Berendt appears to be without family, has always been mysterious about his background and the source of his income, that the men seem as attracted to him as do the women and that he has not had sex with any of his many admirers, and you have the beginnings of a fascinating novel. Oates, though seemingly detached from her flood of characters is nonetheless very sympathetic towards them and as a result we are also. The style of "Middle Age" is a departure for Oates: very much unlike the furtive, paranoid, sexually explicit "Man Crazy" or the technicolor, movie-like "We Were the Mulvaneys." In "Middle Age" Oates is removed yet ultimately attracted to her characters: longing for their lifestyle yet damning of their foibles. It is ultimately not a great novel in the sense that "Mulvaneys," "Because it is Bitter and Because it is my Heart" or "What I Lived for" are for example. But a good Joyce Carol Oates novel is worlds above most author's best and because of this a must read for anyone serious about contemporary fiction.
17 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Fascinating Characters Worth Knowing,
By
This review is from: Middle Age: A Romance
First off, I find it hilarious when people criticize Joyce Carol Oates' work for being overly long... The business of every day living is often interrupted mercilessly by tangents out of our control. Oates' writing often takes on that characteristic as it delves into the thoughts and feelings of its main characters. Yes, it often takes away from the urgency of the plot, but the people in Oates' books are important and you get to know them at their pace.This brings me to her newest novel, Middle Age. What's fascinating about this book is that the main character, Adam Berendt is killed off in the first few pages of the book. The aftermath of his fatal accident sets off a chain of events among his social circle which is comprised of the upper crust of an upscale enclave in New York State. During this examination of relationships, the plot often takes a number of Oates' normal tangents. At times, it's uncomfortable but it exposes you to the same state of mind shared by the characters. The reactions and subsequent foibles of these charaters is memorable and worth every minute you spend with this book. Sure, some of these characters are vapid and have very little to offer the world but there's value in reading what happens to them. Others become so twisted based on the death of Adam Berendt that they come close to throwing away their lives. The book is billed as darkly comical but I rarely laughed because I saw so many glimpses of real life in these people. Some of it was inspirational, a little bit of it was funny, and some of it was disturbing. In short, it's a lot like many of her other books. The only downside of the book was after I finished and asked myself what she was trying to say in writing this book. The overall ending and message left me a bit empty, although it could be described as being somewhat positive. The future for many of the characters in this book, much like the future many ofus face in similar situations, is somewhat unclear and I don't think Oates' provided a strong sense of message or purpose. That being said, I still heartily recommend this book much like I would for many of her books. The main body of the book reveals a lot about human nature and relationships and the stress brought on by tragedy. This book is a winner but given it's ending I'm interested in seeing which direction she takes in her next work.
21 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Starting New,
By
This review is from: Middle Age: A Romance
Middle Age is about several upper class characters exploring potential new paths at the mid-point of their lives. At its centre is Adam Berendt whose life is unexpectedly cut off, but whose influence and Socratic interrogation of life acts as a catalyst to transform his friends in the tight-knit community of Salthill. Their lives, as they understand them, dissolve upon his death to be reformed. The mystery of Adam's past is threaded throughout the novel opening dozens of different possible beginnings to his life at the same time as multiple endings to the other characters' lives are imagined. Oates' tremendous skill is to draw a multitude of realistic detail while emotionally constructing her characters' thoughts. This method works to unearth strange revelations in her contemplation of mortality and the depthless possibilities of experience. The characters tear off the costumes of their present identity to wear new masks and reconstitute their sense of being. Marina Troy's potentiality as an artist has lain dormant for many years, but, through Adam's bequest of a residence for solitude, she is given the possibility of expressing her vision. Augusta Cutler leaves her secure life to pursue dangerous new possibilities and trace Adam's past. These stories as well as those of the other characters are told in a revolving narrative focus that juxtaposes the characters' intentions with the dramatic realizations of their experiences. Their middle age lives turn out not to be about just endings, but multiple beginnings as well. The novel gives a heartfelt portrait of characters that identify themselves alternatively as amorphous and fabled beings and desperate to break from their identification of an ordinary life.
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