The Book of
Ruth is a lovely lyrical book but tells, with increasing tension, a horrific
story. Ruth is the narrator of her own story - of being a girl, a young woman, a
wife and a mother in a Midwestern small town in the US.
[Trigger Warning: Domestic Violence]
[Spoiler alert]
Ruth starts her story after the events of the novel are complete and she is looking back, deciding where to begin her story. Her childhood was characterised by a controlling and emotionally abusive mother, who prefers her academically talented son, and an abusive father who leaves when the children are young.
Ruth’s development is inhibited by her mother but she finds solace in correspondence with her wealthier and childless aunt who encourages her love of books and stories. After school she joins her mother working in a dry-cleaning store.
Ruth describes meeting her husband-to-be, seen by all around as a loser. They marry but are too poor to afford their own home so stay living with Ruth’s mother. She sees only the good in him and ignores his inability to hold down a job, to contribute in any meaningful way to the household and to behave appropriately. Her pregnancy and the birth of her son brings some joy to the whole household but the tension and the underlying sense of impending violence increase until it explodes into extreme violence and murder.
Ruth’s voice is beautifully held throughout the book – a sing song way of talking and her lack of sophistication. The growing tension is so subtle it creeps under the radar until you are fully aware of it. I thought this was really appropriate in a story of domestic violence, where abuse may start small and unnoticed until it starts to escalate. The book does, however, still hold onto stereotypes of domestic abuse occurring in uneducated families in poverty.
- The Hemingway Foundation/PEN Award for Best First Novel 1989
- Great Lakes College Association New Writer’s Award 1989
- Wisconsin Library Association Banta Book Award 1989
- Oprah’s Book Club selection for November 1996
No comments:
Post a Comment