I love it when I finish a book and find myself loathing a character.
Not just being frustrated at the outcome, or being glad that the book is
over, but really, really disliking a character, no matter how
empathetic you are expected to be. This doesn’t include typical
villains, like Sauron from Lord of the Rings, Voldemort from Harry Potter, or Satan in Paradise Lost; but normal characters that do something so terrible that when the book is finished you really hate them.
I’ve always considered this creation of loathsome characters to be the
sign of a great writer. I have a lot of respect for an author who can
craft someone in such a fascinating way that in the end I dislike them
as much as if they had wronged me personally. One writer I admire for
her ability to make me hate her characters is Edith Wharton. The first
novel of hers that I read was The House of Mirth,
published in 1905. A classic novel of manners dealing with 1890s
American aristocracy, the book centered around character Lily Bart, a
young woman offered everything, but who causes scandal after scandal,
turns her back on the man she loves because he isn’t wealthy, and
finally dies of an overdose because she is unhappy. After spending an
entire novel watching a spoiled brat complain that her life was too
hard, I wasn’t surprised – or sad – when Lily Bart was dead. I remember
my kind, grandmotherly literature professor being completely dumbfounded
that I wasn’t upset that the character died at the end.
All that to say, the novel I read for February – Atonement by
Ian McEwan – is another such book. Like Wharton, McEwan’s prose is
beautifully written and captures the life of the upper class of a bygone
era. His phrases and descriptions made even the most mundane events,
like a puddle drying in the sun, seem simultaneously beautiful,
delicate, shameful and heartbreaking. The point of view changed a couple
of times, bringing to life the minds of an elderly woman full of
regret, a young WWII soldier wrongfully accused, and a pretentious
little girl with clarity and detail. All the while making me despise one
of the characters.
Unlike Lily Bart, who squandered her life feeling sorry for herself,
McEwan’s character Briony Tallis spends her life attemting to make
atonement for a terrible mistake she made as a child. One summer as a
young girl she oversees the budding romance between her sister Cecilia
and Robbie, the son of a family servant. Completely misunderstanding
what is going on between them, she considers Robbie a deviant and
publicly blames him when a visiting cousin is raped. Because of her
witness Robbie is sent to prison and later becomes an English soldier
while her sister abandons the family for implicating him and becomes a
nurse in spite of her prestigious college education. Eventually Briony
grows up and comes back into the storyline again after a lengthy section
chronicling Robbie’s war experience and his relationship with his love,
Cecilia. Now Briony herself is a nurse, trying to remain tied to
Cecilia and Robbie through this choice of profession, and after
confronting them to apologize plans to retract her witness statement and
clear Robbie’s name.
There the novel abruptly switches, and it is revealed that the entire
novel to this point is actually Briony’s final manuscript, finished and
ready to publish. She is now in her seventies and is preparing to print
her book and set the record straight. As much as I disliked Briony for
her eagerness to jump to conclusions and sticking her nose where it
didn’t belong in her childhood, it was nothing compared to how much I
loathed her in the final pages. There Briony confesses that the end of
the novel is false – Cecilia and Robbie did not get back together, but
both of them died young without ever seeing each other again. She never
apologized or retracted her statement, but instead lived life as a
successful writer and penned the book, with the happier ending, as an
atonement for her wrongs.
Reading the end of this book I was reminded of another college professor
who taught us to remember that the single narrator is action the most
unreliable. Without any other testimonies they can easily fool the
reader into believing whatever they want them to. Briony is that
narrator. Even though in the epilogue she claims to have written in
honor of Cecilia and Robbie, it seems to me that she’s really doing all
of this to clear her own name. She writes the portion of her
transgression so that she is at fault but we are inclined to forgive her
due to her childhood innocence. She presumptuously writes about the
other characters thinking of her when they are away, and punishes
herself by not letting the fictional versions of them forgive her, as if
this could make up for never actually telling the truth.
I liked the way this book was written – sort of like last month’s book,
with great description, dialogue, and multiple point-of-view changes –
but in the end I felt completely duped by Briony’s chracter and hated
her; not just for fooling me but for ruining the lives of all the other
characters. What is the real truth of what happened? Why was Briony such
a coward as to never contact her sister and tell her she had lied? What
good was it to write a nice story about them after everyone it effected
was dead?
This book exasperated me, but like I said, making me angry at the
characters proves to me what a great writer the author is. Also as the
above professor said, a movie or book that continues to stick with you
is probably a good one. This one was definitely good.
And on a lighter note, I can finally watch the movie adaptation I bought in the $5 bin a few years ago!
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