The Newlyweds by Nell Freudenberger

Nell Freudenberger
(2012)

I read this for our March book club selection and the general consensus last Monday at our meeting was that it was solid but not great and yet our conversation was very animated.  We had definite opinions coming into the discussion about what we liked and disliked and it made for a rousing night of sharing.

We agreed that we all loved that Ms. Freudenberger based this novel on a chance encounter in an airplane with a woman named Farah.  This made the story stand out to us for it’s validity.  While it is fiction it is not just the author’s imaginary ideas of what it would be like for a woman to travel so far for love; she has a first hand account of what that was truly like.  
Synopsis:

In The Newlyweds, we follow the story of Amina Mazid, who at age twenty-four moves from Bangladesh to Rochester, New York, for love. A hundred years ago, Amina would have been called a mail-order bride. But this is an arranged marriage for the twenty-first century: Amina is wooed by—and woos—George Stillman online.
For Amina, George offers a chance for a new life and a different kind of happiness than she might find back home. For George, Amina is a woman who doesn’t play games. But each of them is hiding something: someone from the past they thought they could leave behind. It is only when they put an ocean between them—and Amina returns to Bangladesh—that she and George find out if their secrets will tear them apart, or if they can build a future together.
The Newlyweds is a surprising, suspenseful story about the exhilarations—and real-life complications—of getting, and staying, married. It stretches across continents, generations, and plains of emotion. What has always set Nell Freudenberger apart is the sly, gimlet eye she turns on collisions of all kinds—sexual, cultural, familial. With The Newlyweds, she has found her perfect subject for that vision, and characters to match. She reveals Amina’s heart and mind, capturing both her new American reality and the home she cannot forget, with seamless authenticity, empathy, and grace. At once revelatory and affecting, The Newlyweds is a stunning achievement. (Goodreads)
It is a “stunning achievement” because I learned so much about Bangladesh and how difficult it would be to arrive here in the U.S. with very little background knowledge of our daily life.  Just getting a job would be a huge hurdle.  
Our book club conversation focused a lot on characters and the decisions they made.  We were amazed at Amina’s bravery to arrive here with very little skills.  Many immigrants choose to arrive here through a school visa and thus have school as their focus where Amina comes solely for George.  George, many of us thought, was a little boring and not all that helpful to Amina.  One older member of our group and the woman who recommended this book loved George and thought he was a perfect match for Amina.  The rest of us thought he was lazy (not job wise but relationship wise) as he wanted everything to come easy and his way. He didn’t push to become a Muslim as he had promised which would have helped Amina keep her promise to her mother.  This, to us, was a major mistake but I guess a typical marital issue.  Would a man every really go out of his way to do something he promised to do if it wasn’t something he would choose to do in the first place?  Of course the answer is some men would but George wasn’t written to be a unique individual.  Even his reasons for choosing an online Asia dating service is because he wants a woman who won’t play games.  The question is did he get his wish with Amina?
Many of us enjoyed Amina’s return trip back to Bangladesh.  While she is there she feels out of place and nervous about events that normally would not have bothered her.  She does meet up with Nasir, the son of her father’s best friend, and their friendship is rekindled.  Perhaps Nasir and Amina had at one time been matched together but Nasir left for London and soon after Amina started her initial online conversations with George. Her and Nasir still have an emotional connection though and she is happy with how much he has helped her parents.


Random Quote:


“Amina knew she was a different person in Bangla than she was in English; she noticed the change every time she switched languages on the phone.  She was older in English, and also less fastidious; she was the parent to her parents.  In Bangla, of course, they were still the parents, and she let them fuss over her, asking whether she was maintaining her weight, and if she’d been able to find her Horlicks in America.” (105)

This story has many different layers and it does shine a critical look at the complexity of marriage and relationships.  I’m happy to have read it~I just wish I felt more comfortable with Amina’s choices especially as she travels back to America with her parents.  
Read this great interview of Nell @HuffingtonPost.  
And Polly’s review at SF Gate.

I’d like to read more by this author~




Angry Housewives eating Bon Bons by Lorna Landvik

(2003)

A friend from church gave me this book.  She loves to read like me and we have similar tastes in book but I have to admit when she gave me this one I thought it was going to be a shallow girly book but it has far more depth than that.  Actually I can’t say enough wonderful things about this book as I loved the setting (Minnehaha Creek area of Minneapolis), the characters as they were all very distinct, and of course the book club focal point has me excited about a whole list of older (classic) titles.

Synopsis:

The women of Freesia Court are convinced that there is nothing good coffee, delicious desserts, and a strong shoulder can’t fix.  Laughter is the glue that holds them together-the foundation of a book group they call AHEB (Angry Housewives eating Bon Bons), and unofficial “club” that becomes much more.  It becomes a lifeline.  Holding on through forty eventful years, there’s Faith, a lonely mother of twins who harbors a terrible secret that has condemned her to living a lie; big beautiful Audrey, the resident sex queen who knows that with good posture and an attitude you can get away with anything;  Merit, the shy doctor’s wife with the face of an angel and the private hell of an abusive husband; Kari, a wise woman with a wonderful laugh who knows the greatest gifts appear after life’s fiercest storms; and finally, Slip, a tiny spitfire of a woman who isn’t afraid to look trouble straight in the eye.  (back of the book)

To me that just sounded like a lot to take on but it is a credit to Ms. Landvik’s writing that it never goes over a melodramatic top.  Through the group’s book selections as well as how they react to the changing world around them history was shared through the changing point-of-view of each character.

I’ve started a list of books the Angry Housewives read and I’m interested in reading a bit down the list.  Not that I need more books on my to-read list but often the book club conversations intrigued me.

Selected quotes:

As a peace activist myself I could easily identify with Slip; Freesia Court’s resident bleeding heart in 1968.

“I’m sorry,” I said when I was drained of all bodily fluids, “but I just keep asking myself, whatever happened to the Summer of Love?”
“I beg your pardon?” Faith looked like she’d just been asked to explain the theory of relativity.
“You must think I’m some kind of nut, but it’s just…I don’t know, it’s just that I can’t take what’s happening in the world. I can’t take all these people getting shot.  I can’t take this war.  I just thought we were supposed to be better than that.  I really did believe we were on the dawn of a new age.” (63)


Slip’s brother enlists in the Vietnam War but her feelings never waiver as to the unjust war and its aftermath.

And another great quote during a book discussion:

“But I mean this book in particular,” said Slip impatiently.  “This is a hit-you-over-the-head-look-how-different-our-world-is-from-yours kinda book.”
“I agree,” whispered Kari, so as not to wake the slumbering baby in her arms.  “With both of you.  I always love reading about people with lives unlike mine because I get to live in their world for a while.  But the funny thing about reading On the Road is that I didn’t feel their world was so alien…probably because I’m an outlaw too.”
“If you’re an outlaw,” said Faith, “then I’m Granny Clampett.”
We all laughed, but then Slip said, “I’m with Kari.  I feel like an outlaw too.”
“Well, you are,” said Merit earnestly.  “You get arrested on picket lines.”
“Actually, I’ve never been arrested,” said Slip, and I thought I heard regret in her voice.  “But what I mean is that there are outlaws inside all of us-ready to break rules that need to be broken.”
“Right,” I said.  “But society doesn’t want its wives and mothers and PTA presidents to be outlaws, so most of the time we repress that voice that tells us to break the rules, to-” (87)

I find that to be a perfect quote especially for March-in celebration of women’s history!  Thank heavens to many of the outlaw women like Sojourner Truth, and Julia Ward Howe, Barbara Jordan, and Elizabeth Cady Stanton just to name a few.  Cheers to the outlaws and the rule breakers, the makers of change!

As I’ve talked about this book to other reading friends they’ve asked if I’ve read other books by Lorna Landvik and I haven’t but I’m interested.  Anyone else have favorites of this author?  I would love recommendations.  After reading Lorna’s bio I’m wowed by her own life story.

Calling Invisible Women; A Novel by Jeanne Ray

Calling Invisible Women


2012
246 pages

Jeanne Ray’s latest contemporary women’s fiction novel has something to say about how we allow products to heal ourselves whether they are expensive drugs prescribed by our doctor or Botox-type enhancers that lift money from our wallet for temporary solutions.

Clover Hobart, a fifty-something wife and mother, wakes up one day and discovers she cannot find herself in the mirror after her morning shower.  Her first disappearance lasts only a short time but she’s concerned because her son says he can still see her.  She thinks she might be losing her mind.  When it happens again she locates a group of invisible women that meet at the local Sheraton Hotel.  Clover learns that a combination of three medicines all made by Dexter-White, a pharmaceutical company, is what causes many women of a certain age to become invisible.

Through this group she begins to take action as the reporter she once was spurring others to get busy by exploring what they can accomplish as invisible women.  Because of her new bravery she stops a man from harassing a woman outside the grocery store, she un-arms a robber in the midst of bank robbery, and she and another invisible woman ride the school bus to corral bully behavior.  Eventually she takes on the Dexter-White.

This is a light-hearted look at how easy it is for older women to become invisible in society as what’s young and hip steals focus.  I enjoyed the characters, the topic, and I felt more empowered as I raised my fist in solidarity with them as they crafted a plan to bring down Dexter-White..  It is an easy read-it only took my three days to read the book.  Ray is the author of Julie and Romeo.

A quote:

“No one is interested in us,” Mrs. Robinson said.  “When I look back on my life, I was invisible for so many years before I became invisible.  I never did stand up for myself.  If you don’t stand up before you become invisible, what chance do you have of making people pay attention to you when you aren’t there?”
“Amen to that,” a voice said.  (66)

Reviewed at Dear Author