Novelist May Have Written a Pretentious Novel Intentionally
Pros:
This novel is well worth the time. The language is absolutely exciting!
Cons:
At times, it seems overworked and overblown.
The Bottom Line:
I recommend this for those who aren't interested in a light read. There aren't many books this well written in spite of its pretentious quality.
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Overall Rating:
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Author's Review
By Carolyn Howard-Johnson, Author of This is the Place.
In The Corrections, Franzen gets the last laugh. Youre not going to know what I mean by that until youve read the last paragraph of this review, because, you see, I want the fun of having the last laugh, too.
This book is significant. Yet it seems designed. It wants to impress those who like poetry with its narrative. It seems calculated to appeal to those who like philosophy with its references to Schopenhauer and with its existentialistic protagonist. It feels designed to ensnare baby boomers who are just beginning to worry about aging and depression. Its black humor feels deliberate.
Yes, I loved the language. (I give you hamster-pellet All-Bran as an example.)
Yes, the hair-splitting arguments surrounding feminism, machoism and capitalism were interesting.
Yes, the soul rending moments of helplessness were amusing.
Why then did I have the feeling the sole purpose of all this intellectualism, all this talent, was to make the critics say (as Pat Conroy did on a blurb on the back of the dust cover) that Franzen gives notice that, from now on, he is only going to hunt with the big cats.
Should it be so obvious that an author is giving notice no matter how exalted his talents might be? Should his readers begin to feel that they are treated somewhat like Chip Lambert (our protagonist), treats his studentswith condescension? Might, there, in fact, be an intentional or subconscious parallel between real-life reader and fictional student in the mind of this author?
Or is this simply the show-off factor? We have here whole sectionsnot mere chapters--which allow no relief from Faulknerian sentence structure. There are exercises in stream of consciousness, back and forward motion, that produce in the struggling reader flashes of when is something going to happen in real time? Franzen also seems to delight in showing us how well he can perform the delicate task of point-of-view by doing no less than 15 of them in eight pages (starting on page 241count them!) . There is an exercise in relating events to the title as well. Corrections is alluded to so many times it becomes disconcerting.
Back to the last laugh. Very near the end of the book, Chip realizes where the fatal flaw of his screenplaythe one he had been working and reworkinglay. From his point of view, hed written a thriller where he should have written farce. I think Franzen was telling us something about his own work with that line and thatintentionally or notthat line unites Chip with Franzen and Franzen with Chip. We become acutely award that all this pretentious stuff is just Franzens brand of farce. Who has the last laugh now?
(Carolyn Howard-Johnson is the author of the award-winning This is the Place. Leora Krygier, author of First Came the Raven and Referee of the LA County Superior Court says: Carolyn Howard-Johnson paints us a picture of Utah, love, family, and intolerance in beautiful strokes. Her elegant prose and eye for fine detail takes us on a fascinating journey through Mormon Country. This is a novel that both teaches and touches.)