The first book I read by Jean Hanff Korelitz, “You Should Have Known”, was in 2014…. a mystery thriller. I liked it and gave it 5 stars.
“You Should Have Known” was later given a ‘title change’….
….it’s now called “The Undoing”.…
I have no idea why the title was changed — a fact I only learned today. I also learned that there is a TV series based on the book. I’m guessing the TV series had some influence in changing the novel’s title. . . but I really have no idea.
I then read “The Plot”….a clever thriller … I gave it 4 stars.
Next….I read one of Korelitz’s earlier books called “The White Rose”. Unfortunately, I gave it 2 stars…
So….that brings me to “The Latecomer”….. 4. 5 stars
“Privilege and tragedy. A perfect storm for any adolescent”….
I’ll begin with a personal share ….
When my husband, Paul, was seven years of age, his parents, younger brother, aunts, uncles, and cousins took a camping getaway weekend to celebrate the PhD in engineering degree that Paul’s father had just received from UCLA.
Paul and his dad went off on a hike. From nowhere, a boulder came rolling down the hill and killed his father.
The tragedy was devastating - an unbelievable shocking loss for everyone in Paul’s family.
For Paul, a seven year old boy—who was soon told he was “the man of the house now”….it was a life changing
defining moment.
At the start of this novel two people were killed by a boulder.
Mandy Bernstein— a nice Jewish girl— was killed by a boulder in this story. Salo Oppenheimer was driving the car that killed her. One other person in the car also died.
Salo was only eighteen years old at the time. Nobody blamed Salo ….but how might you feel if you were the driver of two people who died? It doesn’t take a rocket scientist to know it was a defining moment in Salo’s life……
which shows up more after marriage and triplets…...
ha….as if ‘having’ triplets isn’t a defining moment, itself.
A few years later Salo married Mandy’s Little Sister, Johanna Hirsch, (not literally her biological sister), but her ‘Little Sister’from the local Jewish chapel of the B’nai Brith Girls.
As we continue reading….the tales about Salo and Johanna Oppenheimer and their triplets: Harrison, Lewyn, and Sally …(who aren’t happy camper siblings)…..picks up some speed.
The storytelling is divided into three parts….with the tension, surprises, secrets, building steadily.
The writing at the beginning was a little awkwardly written….but the main story itself, was fascinating….looking to be an ambitious complex undertaking….which it sure had to be.
I recognized the Jewish speaking intonations….
Jewish family cultural ideologies…
along with an emphasis preference on wealth and education.
The prose was a little wordy…..editing needs were noticeable—
having ‘too many’ stones blocking an easy pathway to the heart of the story…
requiring strides of patience to plough through parts … yet there were also gems-of-emotional and cerebral interest, secrets, twists, and turns, under those stones.
The themes were as dense as stone too: religion, race, (race/religion combined-complexities), privileged, family, marriage, sexuality, identity, fertility, infidelity, gender, mental health, loss, grief, etc……with flawed and unlikable characters …..
…..as well as love and forgiveness!
Not a traditional thriller/family saga…
Rather….
It’s a
Be Here Now On This Page *savior me* please…..
In exchange……
Readers will find their seat…..
Eat the treats….
Be rewarded.
But…..only if you have the patience to dine, not scarf down a meal.
One teaser/symbolic excerpt….
“The gist of it all, and this was a primary importance to students and parents alike, was that you couldn’t just walk into the Ivy League today, no matter who you were, or where your parents went to college, or how many AP classes you’d taken (a moot issue at Walden, where AP classes weren’t offered because every class was considered AP-equivalent). It was different now”.
Thank you Celadon Books, Netgalley, and Jean Haniff.
I enjoyed it.