The Love of a Good Woman
Alice Munroe
Penguin Books
1999
Ms. Hen bought this book because she knows that Alice Munro
is a great writer, and she should read more of her. Ms. Hen doesn’t
love short stories as much as novels, because she likes to sink her
teeth into a novel and become entrenched in it, but these stories are
different. Ms. Hen was able to live in the short stories; each was its own
complete world, and Ms. Hen became immersed.
These stories are all about women in Canada, and they take
place in a time past, mostly in the Fifties and Sixties, when life was
completely different from the way it is now. Women were not treated with much
respect, and were expected to live a certain way, and if they did not live like
that, they were judged and maligned. All of these stories are about women who
have taken a bad turn.
These stories are not light-hearted. They remind Ms. Hen of
Flannery O’Connor’s writing. There is murder in “The Love of a Good Woman,”
adultery in “The Children Stay,” spouse swapping in “Jakarta,” and a graphic
description of abortion in “Before the Change.” A scene in “Save the Reaper,” seems to be completely
inspired by O’Connor, in which a grandmother takes her two grandchildren on a
ride, and comes across a house of debauchery, and ends up with an escaped,
rough young woman in her car. The grandmother feels unsafe, but she figures a
way out of the trouble.
One thing Munro does well is subtext. The characters are
saying or doing one thing, but they are actually something else is happening.
In the story, “Rich as Stink,” Karin, a ten-year old girl visits her neighbor,
Ann, and Karin notices, “She had put makeup on her face so it didn’t look so
blotchy.” Karin notices that Ann had been crying, but Ann takes her to find some
old clothes, and she puts her wedding dress on Karin. Ann tries to distract
Karin from the fact that she had been crying, because she has to sell the
house, and her husband doesn't love her anymore.
One other story in which there is subtext is the last one in
the book, “My Mother’s Dream.” It is about a young woman, Jill, who has a baby, whose
husband dies in World War II, and afterwards she stays with her in-laws. Jill doesn’t like
the baby, and the baby doesn’t like her at first, but the baby takes to the sister-in-law
Iona. Iona and Aisla and their mother have to go for a ride to visit someone, and
Jill does not know how to be alone with the baby. When they come back, Iona thinks Jill murdered the baby, and mayhem ensues; the doctor comes to visit. The
doctor and Aisla have a moment, “Too speedily and guiltily he took
his own hands away. If he had not done it, it would have looked like an
ordinary comfort he was administering. As a doctor is entitled to do.” There is something between the doctor and Aisla, but it’s a secret, as there are
other secrets in this collection.
Ms. Hen did not think she could finish this book in a week,
because it is long, but she did. She doesn’t give herself deadlines when she
reads, but she likes to write about a book once a week. But even thought this
book is lengthy, it is engrossing. It’s no wonder that Alice Munro won the
Nobel Prize – Ms. Hen thinks she deserves it! And though Ms. Hen has strong
opinions, she’s usually right.
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