3
To start with, look at all the books. There were her
Edith Wharton novels, arranged not by title but date of publication; there was the complete Modern Library set of Henry James, a gift from her father on her twenty- first birthday; there were the dog- eared paperbacks assigned in her college courses, a lot of Dickens, a smidgen of Trollope, along with good helpings of Austen, George Eliot, and the redoubtable Brontë sisters. There were a whole lot of black- and- white New Directions paperbacks, mostly poetry by people like H.D. or Denise Levertov.
There were the Colette novels she read on the sly. There was the first edition of Couples, belonging to her mother, which Madeleine had surreptitiously dipped into back in sixth grade and which she was using now to provide textual support in her English honors thesis on the marriage plot. There was, in short, this mid- size but still portable library representing pretty much everything Madeleine had read in college, a collection of texts, seemingly chosen at random, whose focus slowly narrowed, like a personality test, a sophisticated one you couldn’t trick by anticipating the implications of its questions and finally got so lost in that your only recourse was to answer the simple truth. And then you waited for the result, hoping for “Artistic,” or “Passionate,” thinking you could live with “Sensitive,” secretly fearing “Narcissistic” and “Domestic,” but finally being presented with an outcome that cut both ways and made you feel different depending on the day, the hour, or the guy you happened to be dating: “Incurably Romantic.”
These were the books in the room where Madeleine lay, with a pillow over her head, on the morning of her college graduation. She’d read each and every one, often multiple times, frequently underlining passages, but that was no help to her now. Madeleine was trying to ignore the room and everything in it. She was hoping to drift back down into the oblivion where she’d been safely couched for the last three hours. Any higher level of wakefulness would force her to come to grips with certain disagreeable facts: for instance, the amount and variety of the alcohol she’d imbibed last night, and the fact that she’d gone to sleep with her contacts in. Thinking about such specifics would, in turn, call to mind the reasons she’d drunk so much in the first place, which she definitely didn’t want to do. And so Madeleine adjusted her pillow, blocking out the early morning light, and tried to fall back to sleep.
But it was useless. Because right then, at the other end of her apartment,
the doorbell began to ring.
THE MARRIAGE PLOT: A Novel. Published in October by Farrar, Straus and Giroux. Copyright © 2011 by Jeffrey Eugenides. All right reserved.
From Jeffrey Eugenides, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Middlesex and The Virgin Suicides, comes The Marriage Plot, a beautifully written tale of one woman’s exploration of love, literature and life.
Though everyone else in the early 1980s was reading the Marquis de Sade, Madeleine never got the memo. Jane Austen and George Eliot were more her speed, especially their ideas on true love. But now, a college senior, she has enrolled in a semiotics course “to see what all the fuss is about,” and nothing will ever be the same. Because real life is about to intrude on her world—in the form of a charged erotic and intellectual relationship with a charismatic loner…and the attentions of a boy obsessed with the idea that she’s his mate.
Hardcover : 496 pages
Publisher: Farrar, Straus & Giroux ( October 11, 2011 )
Item #: 13-468401
ISBN: 9780374203054
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 1.04inches
Product Weight: 17.0 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)

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