Sign up to receive special offers and exclusives
Search
Home & GardenBooksCell Phones & Service
Literary
Home

Books

Literature & Fiction

Literary

 
 
Middlesex: A Novel
View larger imageEmail a friend

 
 
 

Middlesex: A Novel

In Stock
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Only 1 left in stock, order soon!
List Price: $15.00
Our Price: $1.97
You Save: $13.03 (87%)

Note: Item may be sold and shipped by another company. Learn more.
Description:

"I was born twice: first, as a baby girl, on a remarkably smogless Detroit day of January 1960; and then again, as a teenage boy, in an emergency room near Petoskey, Michigan, in August of l974. . . My birth certificate lists my name as Calliope Helen Stephanides. My most recent driver’s license...records my first name simply as Cal."

So begins the breathtaking story of Calliope Stephanides and three generations of the Greek-American Stephanides family who travel from a tiny village overlooking Mount Olympus in Asia Minor to Prohibition-era Detroit, witnessing its glory days as the Motor City, and the race riots of l967, before they move out to the tree-lined streets of suburban Grosse Pointe, Michigan. To understand why Calliope is not like other girls, she has to uncover a guilty family secret and the astonishing genetic history that turns Callie into Cal, one of the most audacious and wondrous narrators in contemporary fiction. Lyrical and thrilling, Middlesex is an exhilarating reinvention of the American epic.

Product Details:
Author: Jeffrey Eugenides
Paperback: 529 pages
Publisher: Picador
Publication Date: September 16, 2002
Language: English
ISBN: 0312422156
Package Length: 8.2 inches
Package Width: 5.5 inches
Package Height: 1.0 inches
Package Weight: 1.15 pounds
Average Customer Rating: based on 906 reviews
 
Customer Reviews:
Average Customer Review:4.5
Write an online review and share your thoughts with other customers.

2 of 2 found the following review helpful:

4Very good novel that doesn't quite live up to its promise to be truly great  Mar 15, 2010
I didn't quite enjoy this book as much as I had hoped I would (don't get me wrong though - it's still very good). I've never been convinced that any novel really needs to be much more than 400 pages long, and I suppose this forms the crux of my minor complaint about this novel. Middlesex is one of those multigenerational epic novels that require the reader to commit to the story and characters of the first generation and then transition twice as the story shifts focus onto to the second and third generations while the original characters fall into the background (or die). While there is a common thread or theme that connects the multigenerational tale, essentially these are three separate stories. In the case of Middlesex, the first generation story (the grandparents flee from Asia Minor and become new immigrants in the US) is the most compelling part of the novel. The second tale (kissing cousins marry, have children, and get rich selling hot dogs to the masses) is notably weaker and the novel starts to meander and feel a little bloated. The third portion of the novel focuses on the teenage sexual awakening of hermaphrodite narrator Callie. This should be the primary focus of the novel and yet it ends up feeling strangely rushed at the end. It seems to take a long time for Callie's `condition' to be revealed and acknowledged but once that happens, the story jumps along quickly as if the author started thinking `OK, I guess I should wrap this thing up'. I found the contrived ending involving a ransom from an unlikely source to feel oddly out of place and `tacked on'. The end result for me was that the novel started out strong, gradually began to feel bloated, and then just as it seemed to be getting to the heart of the novel's promised theme, wraps up too quickly.

The story ends while Callie (now Cal) is still a teenager and as a result, the connection between the teenager and the narrator (now in his early 40s) isn't as strong as I would have liked. We don't see the progression and learn how Cal makes the transition to an adult. I'm not asking for another two hundred pages to be added to the novel, but it seemed like Eugenides made some strange choices in deciding where to place the emphasis in his novel. I could have done with less of the Milton and Tessie years. As characters I found them lacking and their story of entrepreneurism in America a little clichéd and thin. I would have preferred instead, greater focus on the Cal years, watching him progress into adulthood.

If I sound like I didn't enjoy this novel that would be wrong. The grandparents are rich and wonderful characters and Callie as a young woman is authentic and fully realized. Eugenides is a talented writer and his prose is exceptionally good. Middlesex is a big, bold novel full of wry humor. Eugenides does an admirable job of blending history into his story and has produced a thought provoking novel that explores the nature of identity. The usual literary devices are evident but not too subtle and not too heavy handed: parallels between silkworms, the new immigrant experience, and sexual duality and re-birth abound.

Readers should note that Middlesex does include some sexual content that might make some people uncomfortable (incest, 14 year old girl sleepovers, and peep shows of the unusual variety). Most people chosing to read a novel about a hermaphrodite probably won't be too shocked, but some people might find the content a little outside their comfort zone.

The bottom line: Middlesex is a very good novel - I just think it could have been brilliant and for me at least, it fell a little short of its promise.


0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5WONDERFUL BOOK  Mar 14, 2010
This is the Pulitzer winner.
Over five hundred 5 star ratings.
This is a classic. A marvelously well written novel about generations of a immigrant family, one of whom is very different.
READ THIS BOOK.

0 of 1 found the following review helpful:

5Coming of age in 20th century America  Mar 09, 2010
I must have read this book 10 years ago and still think about it. This is a universal coming of age story. It's an immigrant tale. It's boy meets girl. It's a tale of Chicago from the 1950's to the present. It has wonderful sentences. It's ingenious. It's family. It's modern America. (It's also hilarious and made me cry).

5Middlesex  Feb 23, 2010
What a book this was! I thoroughly enjoyed every minute of the almost two weeks that I spent reading it. Wow! This is one of those books that I had been meaning to read for years, but I never picked it up. Jeffrey Eugenides' book is about a hermaphrodite, but it is also an enthralling family saga. I love that. Cal is one of those characters that I will remember always, along with that quirky Greek-American family: Milt, Tessie, Desdemona, Lefty, Chapter Eleven, Father Mike, Aunt Zo and on and on. I also enjoyed all the descriptions of the Greco-Turkish War, Detroit over several decades, San Francisco, just a host of things.


5accomplishes the near-impossible- turning hermaphroditism into a bestselling topic  Feb 15, 2010
I wouldn't give this book five stars based on my personal preference- the author's style and sense of humor relies too much on a somewhat irritating "cuteness" for my taste. But there's no way I could deny that this is a five star work by virtue of accomplishing something I would have thought impossible- turning a story about a hermaphrodite into an international bestseller.

To be sure, Eugenides' acute attention to detail is remarkable, and there's a fair bit of cleverness in the story of the Eugenides family over three generations. For example, the protagonist describes thinking about his parents: "Is there anything as incredible as the love story of your own parents? Anything as hard to grasp as the fact that those two over-the-hill players, permanently on the disabled list, were once in the starting lineup? It's impossible to imagine my father, who in my experience was aroused mainly by the lowering of interest rates, suffering the acute, adolescent passions of the flesh."

Eugenides' take on Detroit, the setting for much of the story, is responsible, if far too tame to counteract the mainstream media's fallacies that somewhat unfairly cripple the city's image today. He properly pins the blame for the city's destruction democratically on not just one race but "all these people coming from everywhere to cash in on Henry Ford's five-dollar-a-day promise," while acknowledging racist systemic factors holding down the black population ("Desdemona realized now why there was so much trash in the streets: the city didn't pick it up. White landlords let their apartment buildings fall into disrepair while they continued to raise the rents.").

Still, this felt like a timid work, entertaining but not enlightening or moving, until about page 400 when the protagonist finally visits a sexologist to clear up the mystery of his/her gender. At this point the book delves into a heavy handed background of the biological and cultural aspects of hermaphroditism, astutely concluding that "Sex is biological. Gender is cultural. The Navajo understand this." Much like the protagonist doesn't tell dates upfront that he/she is a hermaphrodite, the author patiently waits 400 pages to properly delve into the subject when the time is right.

 
 
Bestsellers
Gattaca [Blu-ray]Gattaca [Blu-ray]
Ethan Hawke, Uma Thurman, Alan Arkin and Jude Law star in this engrossing sci-fi thriller about an all-too-human man who dares to defy a system obsessed with genetic perfection. Hawke stars as Vincent, an "In-Valid" who assumes the identity of a memb ...
List Price: $28.95
Our Price: $10.99
You Save: $17.96 (62%)
Add to Cart
Resident Evil [Blu-ray]Resident Evil [Blu-ray]
Something rotten is brewing beneath the industrial mecca known as Raccoon City. Unknown to its millions of residents a huge underground bioengineering facility known as The Hive has accidentally unleashed the deadly and mutating T-virus killing all o ...
List Price: $19.95
Our Price: $10.49
You Save: $9.46 (47%)
Add to Cart
Run Lola Run [Blu-ray]Run Lola Run [Blu-ray]
A thrilling post-MTV, roller-coaster ride, Run Lola Run is the internationally acclaimed sensation about two star-crossed lovers who have only minutes to change the course of their lives. Time is running out for Lola (Franka Potente). She's just rece ...
List Price: $19.95
Our Price: $9.49
You Save: $10.46 (52%)
Add to Cart
Web business powered by Amazon WebStore



About Us   Contact Us   Privacy Policy   Shipping Policy
Free Shipping on Orders $25 and Up!

Copyright ©2009 SONY MUSIC ENTERTAINMENT. All rights reserved.