02-16-2018, 09:54 AM | #46 | ||
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Passing has that flaw of many first novels of being grossly overwritten. A good editor, or even a keen eye early on who alerted Larsen to the flaw, could have made a difference. I found the style rather off-putting from the start and then got to this: Quote:
I was done for after that; I'll just mention my contention for worst of all, when Clare's dress was described as being made of "priceless velvet." Well, unless Clare stole the fabric from the Velvet Louvre, she most certainly paid for it and it had a price. So it wasn't just the common flaw of too many adjectives and adverbs; the injudicious selection of words compounded the situation. This created a jarring note for me throughout the book. |
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02-16-2018, 10:10 AM | #47 |
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That's an interesting observation, issybird. I read this book first as an Audible book, driving down on an urgent trip to my DW's aunt. (A LONG two day trip, that we should have made a three day trip.) I really didn't get hit with the inappropriate language during that read, but came away from the book being impressed and moved by the impact of it, while thinking the actual writing was not very good. It was only later, when I had a chance to read it as an eBook that I was better able to define the problems, which are much as you describe.
The thing about this book is that despite those problems, it's impact is still powerful. Now I'm sure some of that is what I bring to the table, in that I've got some (limited) understanding of the knife-edge that "passing for white" has on an individual. And in this book we get the reminder of the risks especially for women in an era where birth control was far from universally or easily available. The isolation from family and childhood friends and community, the need to suppress the anger at the racism around you, and the constant fear of discovery or outing. It's difficult for any white American to really understand and appreciate, except in an intellectual way. |
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02-16-2018, 10:57 AM | #48 |
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If I were the editor, I might have suggested to Larsen to start the novel where it ends--Irene in distress after Clare's plunge, without giving away any of the details. Then I would have told the story in one long flashback, so the reader knows that all the scenes are leading up to something dramatic. The way the book reads now, it feels unfocused; I didn't know where anything was heading. The first two sections drone on and on, and then the last section is packed with dramatic events.
I am probably influenced by my reading of suspense and the way those novels are often structured. But I think I would have enjoyed the process of reading Passing more if I'd known there was a dead body at the end of it. |
02-16-2018, 11:23 AM | #49 | |
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But I'm very glad you made that comment! Until you did, it hadn't occurred to me to consider other meanings for "passing." First, I realized that the title could also refer to the death at the end; a cosmic pun even, as passing led to passing. Then, more ominously, it can also imply that passing (as a white person) represents the passing (death) of one's essential self. I had never connected the two; I thought of "passing" as being a fairly straightforward term. |
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02-16-2018, 12:51 PM | #50 | ||
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I don't know. I'll see your "stately glass" and raise you one overly stimulated ocean. This is from next month's selection, The Old Man and the Sea by Ernest Hemingway. (I don't think spoiler tags are needed as nothing pertinent to the plot is revealed here): "Just before it was dark, as they passed a great island of Sargasso weed that heaved and swung in the light sea as though the ocean were making love with something under a yellow blanket, his small line was taken by a dolphin." |
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02-16-2018, 12:56 PM | #51 | |
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02-16-2018, 01:05 PM | #52 | |
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02-16-2018, 01:12 PM | #53 | |||
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Okay, I took extensive notes when I read this, so this might be lengthy.
Religious Themes I am surprised that no one else has mentioned the apparent anti-semitism in the book. Irene and her friends mock the Claude "the black jew" saying that he is no longer Christian or black because he converted to Judaism. But it was more striking later on when she is speaking of those non-black folks who attend and observe the NWL events saying: Quote:
I appreciated this as merely timeless and still terribly applicable today: Quote:
Unreliable Narrator Looking back on all the things Irene said about Clare, I wonder if from the very beginning we are not dealing with an unreliable narrator. I am not in the camp that thinks Irene pushed Clare (I think her husband did it - more on that later), but she never really had anything good to say about Clare. She was always grasping, greedy, taking what did not belong to her. Quote:
Whodunnit As for the murder itself, I believe that John pushed Clare, but that Irene was wholly complicit in it. We were given numerous examples of Iren fearing what John would do to Clare if he discovered her secret. But it wasn't until after she believed that her husband was having an affair with Clare that she no longer saw fit to protect her from that danger. She had ample time to warn Clare that John had found out, but due to her own jealousy and conflicts, she chose not to. I believe in the end that John pushed Clare, and Irene, knowing that she was just as responsible, has her little break at the end of the book and swears she fell. She isn't protecting John, but it seems to be she is protecting her personal relationships over her race, which seems to be a theme of the entire book. Her internal struggles on this point (I wrote down at least four different page references for this), were some of the most interesting material in the book. I am sure I have forgotten something, so I might add more later. I am also sure, given that I had a small window of time to scribble this up, that there are mistakes. Humor me. |
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02-16-2018, 01:25 PM | #54 | ||
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My point was, that I didn't believe in this chance encounter and it was the key to the denouement. |
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02-16-2018, 01:28 PM | #55 | |
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02-16-2018, 08:53 PM | #56 | ||
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That's an interesting take on it. I don't think it's a likely scenario (too many in that room would have been looking for just such violence from John Bellew for him to get away with it), but it's a neat way of interpreting some of Irene's internal struggles leading up to the tragedy. |
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02-16-2018, 09:19 PM | #57 |
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Two questions.
Since the book is entirely Irene's POV, would it have worked better as a first-person narration? I think the use of third person makes Irene less unreliable than she would have been if telling the story herself. Passing was actually Nella Larsen's second novel, preceded by Quicksand, which was apparently more successful. Has anyone read Quicksand? |
02-16-2018, 09:23 PM | #58 |
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I wasn't at all sympathetic to Claire. She didn't have to marry someone who hates people of color. She took that risk and even introduced Irene to him. Claire took the risk and it backfired on her.
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02-16-2018, 09:39 PM | #59 |
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As an impecunious mixed-race orphan, Clare may have thought Jack was the best of limited options. And at 18, I don't think she could be expected to understand the psychic toll of passing. In some ways, Clare is a cross between Melania Trump and Princess Di.
Last edited by issybird; 02-16-2018 at 10:04 PM. |
02-16-2018, 11:13 PM | #60 | |
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Clare’s options would have been very limited, AND she wanted to escape from her aunts. Career options would have been zero, and quite possibly any sort of work, as we are talking of a book written in 1929. No mention of the crash and the Great Depression, but perhaps that was still in the future at the time of writing. I must admit I had not read the references to Jews as being derogatory, but I intend doing a quick reread, so will bear that in mind, astrangerhere. |
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