Random thoughts about T.C. Boyle’s amusing and interesting The Road to Wellville, which Goodreads says I’ve read before but I haven’t. So either Goodreads is wrong or I’m a lying liar who lies:
Provenance: Picked up from a Little Free Library in my neighborhood while out walking my dog.
Expectations: Although I had given this four stars, I hadn’t read it, so I really didn’t know what to expect.
The Story: Will and Elanor Lightbody go to Battle Creek, Michigan, for an extended stay at Dr. Kellogg’s Sanitarium, where all of the latest health fads (vegetarianism, daily enemas, deep breathing exercises, etc.) are part of the daily routine.
In a separate but connected plot line, Charlie Ossining comes to Battle Creek to make his fortune running a startup breakfast food business with his partner, Bender.
Nothing, in either story, goes as planned.
What it's really about: The obsession with health and diet, and the people who take advantage of those seeking it. Though the story takes place at the turn of the 20th century, the message is timeless.
Boyle fictionalizes what was happening in the early 1900’s, but the same is true today. Humans are obsessed with prolonging their lives and living as healthy a lifestyle as possible. From Dr. Kellogg’s methods to vibrating exercisers to Ozempic, people are always trying to be healthier and lose weight, and there are others who seeks to profit from that.
Not that Kellogg is a charlatan. He truly believes that his methods prolong better health and longer life. He is more of a quack who thinks that he is doing much good for the world. His patients come to the Sanitarium and give themselves over to him, never questioning his methods but blindly following along with whatever he and his staff prescribes.
At the same time, Charlie Ossining, like many others of that time, are trying to become rich and famous. With the advent of Corn Flakes, Grape Nuts, and other popular cereals, getting into the breakfast food business is a way to do that. It’s the early 20th century’s cryptocurrency.
Like the Lightbody’s, Charlie comes to Battle Creek naïve and trusting, setting him up to be taken advantage of by Bender. Bender is truly bad, scamming Charlie and his investors out of their money.
This is all told in a comic, farcical manner with many moments of humor. In the end, the Lightbody’s and Charlie learn some valuable lessons and come out the other side ultimately for the better.
Could this be a movie or tv series?: This was a 1994 film starring Matthew Broderick and Bridget Fonda as the Lightbody’s and Anthony Hopkins as Dr. Kellogg.
Of Note: In addition to the above, John Cusack plays Charlie, Dana Carvey plays Dr. Kellogg’s estranged adopted son George, Lara Flynn Boyle plays another Sanitarium guest, and Michael Lerner plays Bender.
One of the messages of the book is that one size does not fit all when it comes to health. Sanitarium patients die because the doctors and nurses are so wedded to their solutions that they don’t realize when someone doesn’t fit that mold. In fact, patients seeking other treatments or “cures” outside of the Sanitarium is highly discouraged. So there is an element of anti-“groupthink” that is also relevant today. The book makes gentle fun of people who go along with something crazy just because everyone else is going along with it.
Picking Nits: I think that the book is too long by about a third. Near the end, I found myself skimming the descriptive paragraphs.
If you don’t like farce, there will be moments in this book that will be difficult for you. Some of the bad guys are so cartoonish that you want to yell at the good guy to run away and save themselves.
Recommendation: It’s a good book, if a bit overlong. Again, I have never read this so I don’t know how or why I hard it rated at four stars, except to say that I was clearly trying to deceive all of you. Still, there is humor and some beautiful writing in it.