PURITY (2015)
Jonathan Franzen
Farrar, Straus &
Giroux, 563 pages
* *
Americans don't read much, but that doesn't stop them from
tossing the occasional writer into the celebrity hype and buzz machine.
Jonathan Franzen is the literary equivalent of a rock star. This means
reviewers generally decamp in one of two tents: sycophants who praise
everything he types, or iconoclasts seeking to knock Humpty Dumpty from the
wall. The Guardian dubbed Purity—Franzen's first novel in five
years–"brilliant," and the New
Republic speculated that Franzen might be the nation's greatest living
novelist. By contrast, Gawker slammed Purity
as high school prose, sniffed as its "placid gutlessness," and
dismissed it as a buzz-driven "piece of shit."
Few embody buzz, excrement, and overwrought as well as
Gawker, but though I'm tempted to agree with Gawker's takes-one-to-know-one
assessment, I'd judge Purity neither masterpiece nor bovine exhaust. It
has occasional insights, but it's mostly just mediocre. It surprises me more,
though, that almost no one has picked up on the book's most-intriguing aspect,
its title and Franzen's musings upon it. Most reviewers stop with the
observation that Purity is the given name of the book's central character,
23-year-old "Pip" Tyler. They miss that every character suffers from
existential crises resulting from the pull between purity and grime. These are
expressed in ways such as: morality versus desire, character versus celebrity,
principle versus pragmatism, prudence versus urgency, and fidelity versus lust.
Our titular character Pip/Purity is the cog of the novel.
She's a 23-year-old recent college grad living with a band of misfits in
Oakland, and stuck in a revolving door of dead-end jobs that won't make a dent
in her college debt. She has good intentions and tries to care for her
housemates, a few of which are scarred physically or psychologically, but she
also suffers from Millennial self-absorption and doesn't understand why she
can't sleep with anyone she wishes, or why somebody won't just give her
$130,000 to pay off her student debt. It sure won't be her mother, Anabel
Laird, a recluse in the Santa Cruz Mountains who lives like a cross between an
ageing hippie and a survivalist. Pip can't even get her mother to stop calling
her "Pussycat," tell her who her father is, or reveal a single detail
of her life before she had Pip. The out-of-sort Pip is thus intrigued when
another housemate, Annagret, an oddball German-born eco activist, recruits her
for The Sunshine Project. This, we discover, is a Bolivia-based Wikileaks-like organization run by an
East German ex-pat, Andreas Wolf. Like Julian Assange, Wolf is famous, infamous,
and wanted; hence the Bolivian address. (We know Andreas is like Assange
because Franzen constantly makes that very analogy!)
All of the major characters' stories overlap. We first meet
Andreas in East Berlin two years before the Wall came down, where he's torn
between his earnestness as a street angel/church youth counselor for troubled
teens, and his libidinous desire to bed them. Annagret, though, is special and
he helps her in a way that put both in danger. Before Andreas makes his way to the
West, he enlists the aid of a visiting American journalist, Tom Aberant, the
one person other than Annagret who knows Andreas' dark secret. Decades later,
Andreas has assumed the mantle of a social justice crusader and uses his
Svengali-like magnetism to draw idealists to his Web projects. Will Pip also
fall to his charms?
Purity leaves opens
itself to charges of packing way too many implausible coincidences into one
story. Tom reappears–along with an absurd and superfluous back-story involving
his father–and with a life partner named Leila, whose purity is compromised by
her simultaneous roles as Tom's colleague/lover and her live-in status as the
caregiver for a paraplegic husband she was on the verge of leaving before his
accident. Through even more bizarre circumstances, all of the characters are
connected through Pip. Gawker's overwrought tag has merit, especially in
Franzen's deus ex machina approach to
resolving dilemmas.
Add overlong to the book's problems. Must we equate being a
"weighty" writer with the quantity of pages churned out? Purity could lose half its bulk and be
no worse for it. The central premise is a compelling one. How does one maintain
integrity in a world whose stronger currents run the other way? We don't,
however, need another long book on this theme–Donna Tartt already wrote and
collected a Pulitzer for it. Her Goldfinch
also had characters less whiny than Pip, more deliciously Machiavellian than
Andreas, more convincingly bohemian than Anabel, more conflicted than anyone in
Purity, and with considerably more
trust in the readers to connect the dots. I didn't hate this book, but as
purity goes, it's more beige than white.
Rob Weir
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