Thursday, March 26, 2009

Long Semester's Journey Into Graduation

It's getting to be that time again, folks, and the combination of spring fever and senioritis is certainly working a number on me. So what does a giddy gal like me read to plunge back down into those undergraduate pits of despair? Eugene O'neill, of course! More specifically, his masterpiece play Long Day's Journey Into Night. (Sounds upbeat, doesn't it?)

Long Day's Journey tells only of one full day in the life of the Tyrone family in August of 1912. James Tyrone is a failed actor, his eldest son (Jamie) is a bit of a ne'er-do-well, his youngest son (Edmund) is dying of tuberculosis, and his wife Mary... *sigh* Well, there's something about Mary.

The Tyrone family's favorite way of communicating is by not communicating. In fact, the men of the family make every effort to hide family difficulties, troubles, or worries from flighty Mary Tyrone. Eventually, we learn that Mary has become addicted to morphine following Edmund's birth nearly twenty years earlier. She has been fighting the addiction, having returned from the 1912 version of rehab ("the sanatorium"), but is once more displaying signs of morphine use. The Tyrones know that worry only drives Mary to morphine even more. Meanwhile, Mary is paranoid of the men's paranoia and is convinced that they're watching and analyzing her every move (which she is right about).

When Mary is in her drug-induced state, she becomes very removed from the situation and goes on and on about all the things she could have been, if ony she hadn't married that damnable James Tyrone. As a coping mechanism, the Tyrone men drink...a lot. In fact, James Tyrone very well could be considered an alcoholic and both of his boys are headed that way.

This play is extremely autobiographical (O'neill's own mother was named Mary and was a morphine addict), so much so that O'neill forbade it from ever being publicly performed until there were no remaining O'neill family members still living. The tale is also very cyclical and lacks that satisfying finish because the Tyrone family still doesn't have closure for itself by the end of the play.

While it's probably not the best choice for entertainment purposes, Long Day's Journey is O'neill's masterpiece for good reason and is a great source of insight into the psyche of the writer, as well as into our own family relationships.

For other reviews on this classic drama, please visit the following:
Amazon Customer Reviews
Amazon Editorial Reviews
RTE Entertainment

Sunday, March 22, 2009

Haunted by a Handmaid

Written in 1984, Margaret Atwood's The Handmaid's Tale is a literary gut punch. It has been saddled with nearly every literary label under the sun from science fiction or feminist to dystopian or speculative fiction. Truly, it is an amalgamation of all of these terms because it borrows a bit from each area. The horror of the novel, however, lies in its inherent possibility.

The story takes place in the not-too-distant future. The president has been assassinated and Congress "machine-gunned" by a group of Islamic fanatics...or so the citizens are told. The Constitution is suspended and a new law is in place: women are no longer allowed to hold property or jobs, own or acquire money, and are no longer allowed to read. The government has been overthrown by an extreme Christian-fundamentalist theocracy who turns the United States into the Republic of Gilead. Because of the high rate of birth defects and the plunging numbers of healthy Caucasian births, any woman of childbearing years with "viable ovaries" is taken from her family and forced to train as a Handmaid. Handmaids have but one responsibility: become pregnant and carry that child to term. These women are garbed in red with white "wings" around their face to act as blinders. Other women are chosen to serve as household servants or Marthas, and wear green. The highest rank of women is that of the Wives, who wear blue. Each household is run by a Commander, the husband of a Wife. If the Commander and his Wife are unable to conceive (which, in this government, is always the fault of the woman, never the man), they are assigned a Handmaid. The Handmaid lays with the Commander once a month in hopes to conceive. After three failed pregnancies, the Handmaid is declared an Unwoman and sent off to The Colonies to clean up toxic waste (with an expected lifespan of no more than three years).

Punishment in Gilead is taken very seriously. If a woman is caught reading (a sin for women in Gilead), the third offense is punishable by the removal of a hand. Attempts at escape are met with instant death and any kind of dissention from the government or their official brand of Christianity is rewarded with either a Salvaging (public hanging) or a Particicution (a ceremony in which you are beaten, then dragged in front of a mob who will rip you apart). There are very few friendships in Gilead, as the Eyes (government spies) are everywhere and executions are frequent. However, the novel's main character Offred ("Of-Fred", named for her Commander) retains hope that she will someday be reunited with her husband Luke and their daughter. Through the horrors that exist in Gilead and the novel, the reader is buoyed on by Offred's recollections of her former life and by the quiet hope to which she clings.

Often considered a sister novel to works such as George Orwell's 1984 or Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange, Atwood's story of a simple Handmaid is a tale that is sure to haunt any reader for years to come.

For other reviews of this novel, please see the following:
Powell's Books
Amazon Reviews
Good Reads

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Bookmark in Lieu of a Breakdown

I have two 8-week online classes ending this week as well as some big projects due in my other classes, so I haven't had time to put together a literature review for this week's post. Don't despair, Constant Reader (to borrow a phrase from The King)! I still have something up my sleeve.

Since we won't be having a discussion on this post this week, I thought I could leave you with some recommendations on where to go here in Springfield for book discussions. The Springfield-Greene County Library system has a whole list of book clubs and book discussions throughout the spring. This list has discussions planned all the way through May 26th.

Need a way to keep the kids busy and get them more involved in reading? Try taking them to one of the Library's storytimes. For the tweens and older kids, there are the TeenNight events. All events at the Springfield-Greene County Library locations are free of charge and open to the public.

This is where I place the bookmark for this week, ladies and gents. We'll pick up where we left off next week, hopefully a bit saner and less maxed-out!

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Love & Literature

I was a Jane Austen virgin until the fall of 2006 or so. I picked up a copy of Austen's second novel Pride & Prejudice and immediately fell in love. How could I have gone so long without reading this masterpiece?

Originally titled First Impressions, this brilliant piece of literature begins with the introduction of the Bennett family and the story centers around the Bennetts' daughter Elizabeth. Early on, Elizabeth Bennett makes the acquaintance of Mr. Darcy (the new renter at Netherfield in the Bennetts' neighborhood) and they strongly dislike one another. They each despise the others' pride, but it is their own pride which makes it difficult to overcome the prejudices they have against one another. As events unfold throughout the novel, Elizabeth and Mr. Darcy slowly come to learn more of one another and dislike turns to apathy, then to affection, then eventually to a great love.

Like all of her novels, this Austen work has a very narrow scope, encompassing merely a few families in a specific area of England, with very little mention of the surrounding country or the world at large. Any references to distant places are just that: distant and cursory. Jane Austen is renowned the world over for her razor-sharp satire of English society in the early nineteenth century, but is also lauded for showing such an unfettered view of a woman's experiences in that time.

As much as Austen mocks the rigidity of society and its norms in the Victorian era, she was also very dedicated to tradition. In this way, it comes as no surprise that Austen's writing style is very consistent with the way a woman was meant to behave in that era. One of the most common complaints about Austen novels is that there is a lack of overwhelming emotion, which is understandable because Austen tends to shy away from such effusions of feeling. However, the careful reader will not find it hard to sense Austen's--and her characters'--subtle passion throughout all of her novels. Women in Austen's time were meant to think sensibly and rationally which meant that outbursts of emotion and passion were discouraged. However, suppressing those feelings didn't mean that they weren't nearly bursting from the seams of their corsets, much like any Austen novel's binding is practically splitting from the passion held within its pages.

For other reviews of this wonderful classic story, please visit the following:
Amazon Customer Reviews
Good Reads
CHUD.com

Also, the entire novel can be read in linked-hypertext at Pemberly or in book form at Google Books.