Claudia had the misfortune to be born with an ugly face. Growing up in a modest, loving Vermont family, she painfully learned to compensate for her looks in other ways—ways that led to a good marriage to Dan, a young man from a well-off New York City family. Appalled by their new daughter-in-law’s appearance, Dan’s parents encourage plastic surgery, and suddenly, amazingly, at age thirty, Claudia experiences life for the first time as an attractive woman.
Claudia barely has time to accustom herself to her newly sculpted features when Dan’s work transfers the couple to a small town in the South. There, she begins to feel an affinity not just to the lush, hot landscape but also to the black people who live, as she once did, at the margins of the affluent white society she and Dan are welcomed into. Claudia’s lifelong wish for prettiness has come dazzlingly true, but behind her remade face, she struggles to believe in it. Increasingly isolated from Dan, who is relishing their new life and friends, Claudia finds herself rebelling against the subtle, pervasive racism that imbues Southern life and, in search of an honest, true connection, unconsciously drawn to the black man who does their yard work. Claudia’s fascination with him sets off an explosive chain of events through which the layers of her physical disguise begin to disintegrate.
Boldly assured, electrifying in its emotional impact, Passing Strange heralds a major new talent. From the melancholy romanticism of Scott Fitzgerald to the fearless honesty of Flannery O’Connor, MacLeod recalls the masters, but she forges her own territory with a vision that is troubling, wise, yet surprisingly unsentimental. Our obsession with physical appearance is laid bare in this love story of bittersweet beauty, a work of resounding complexity and insight.
This first novel is full of intimate phrases that illuminate fleeting feelings. The book can also delve deep into the contradictions of what is and what should be, that is, the contradictions of life. MacLeod's writing is full of love for the language as well as love for life in its most unexpected moments. I thoroughly enjoyed reading this book from cover to (almost) cover (I would have preferred a more subtle ending, but who am I? Certainly not the author!). If you enjoy the turn of a phrase which brings joy to transitions we are often unaware of, then you'll love this book.
The premise of this book was really interesting, but I didn't care for the mystery and crime elements that developed later in the book. It is about a woman who has massive plastic surgery to lose her ugly duckling look and moves to North Carolina as a new person. Could have better if the focus was on that part of the story, rather than affairs and crimes.
I'm not sure why I soured on this book. The premise was interesting and the writing was ambitious and intelligent, if a little clumsy at times. I think she spent too much time in the descriptions. I just felt no desire to continue reading it.