When Madeline Was Young
Jane Hamilton
Anchor Books
2006
Ms. Hen happened to buy this book because she was in a
bookstore, and she had heard of the author, and she liked the title. She read
the description, and was intrigued by the story of the woman who became
incapacitated and was treated like a daughter by her ex-husband and his new
wife.
Madeline is a beautiful woman who suffered an accident in
the 1940s. She was riding a bicycle with her husband, after they had been
married for a year, and she falls and hits her head and become mentally
challenged. Aaron, the husband, has an acquaintance who is studying nursing, so
she comes to help them, and eventually Julia and Aaron get married, after he
divorces Madeline. They treat her like a daughter, and they have two more
children.
This novel is told from the point of view of Mac, Aaron and
Julia’s son. He is a sensitive, smart boy who grows up to become a doctor. The
novel revolves around the present day conversation between Diana, Mac’s wife,
and Mac about whether or not he should go to his cousin Buddy’s son’s funeral.
Mac doesn’t want to go, but Diana thinks he should out of family duty. Buddy
was a rough young man, and Mac hasn’t seen him in a long time.
Ms. Hen thinks it’s interesting that Mac is the one who is
telling the story. He is not the most important person in the book, and the
choice to shape the novel around him is different. Ms. Hen thinks Mac is a
great character, and she understands why he is telling the story, but she might
have wanted to know what is happening in Madeline or Julia’s mind.
This novel is primarily a story about a family,
dysfunctional in its own way. Mac muses that if Madeline had had her accident
in the new millennium, she might have had access to better treatment and
recovery. Relatives said that they thought Madeline should have been in a home,
but Julia would not hear of that. They handle her like a perpetual little
girl, which may have stunted her growth, if she could have had any. In the
1940s and 50s, not much was known about the right way to treat the disabled.
Many people stayed at home with their parents, and were not given the type of
education and therapy that is given today.
Ms. Hen enjoyed this novel, even though it is very slow. It
is not a loud novel; it is quiet and calming. There is fighting and sex, but
even so, the noise level does not go up. Ms. Hen took her time reading WHEN
MADELINE WAS YOUNG. It is not a
novel that a reader plows through, but rather wades through, gently.
There are some chickens in this novel, and they are mostly
food. One of Ms. Hen favorites is when Mac and his family visit Buddy, “He was eating a pile
of barbecue chicken wings and drinking a beer, nodding occasionally.” Ms. Hen
likes this because it is a visceral scene, a man in his backyard after his
son’s funeral eating chicken wings.
Ms. Hen enjoyed this novel. It is complicated and strange, and
the characters are compelling. They are different from the people Ms. Hen
knows, and getting to know strangers and getting in their heads and learning
their particular pain is the purpose of fiction.
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