lunabee34: (reading by thelastgoodname)
lunabee34 ([personal profile] lunabee34) wrote2016-04-05 07:42 pm

Avenue of Mysteries by John Irving

So, we had a colleague over for dinner in December and spent a wonderful evening talking about favorite books and favorite authors. Jon's favorite author is John Irving; I read The World According to Garp about 15 years ago and remember enjoying it (although I don't think I'd be able to read it now because of child death as a prominent plot point) but remember little else about the book or Irving's writing style.

We don't normally exchange Christmas gifts with Jon, but he surprised me with Irving's latest book, and now that I have read it, I have to come up with good things to say about it as the gift was very thoughtful and kind.

So, the good stuff first.

The book is called Avenue of Mysteries because it deals with the capital M Mysteries of the Catholic Church, but also because it is in some sense a mystery story. The past is interwoven deftly with the present in such a way that clues about how the protagonist's life is shaped gradually come together, and figuring out what happened to Juan Diego when he was a kid and what's happening to him now at the end of his life is really interesting.

Irving is good at characterization. Lupe, Juan Diego's sister, is fascinating, as are any number of the characters in the book.

Juan Diego's adopted parents die of AIDS in the early nineties, and reading about how much he loved them and how he was never ashamed or embarrassed by their unorthodox relationship is incredibly moving. In fact, Juan Diego explicitly states that one of the reasons he never pursues a romantic relationship with anyone is that he can't imagine loving anyone as much as his parents loved each other.

However, I feel as if this is a book that only a white guy of a certain age could love (which will not feature in my discussion of this book with Jon as he is indeed a white guy of a certain age).



Lots and lots and lots of unnecessary sex with women much younger than Juan Diego (two women, in fact; a mother and daughter who I am pretty sure are supposed to be avatars of the Virgin Mary and the Virgin of Guadalupe). Lots and lots of thinking about sex and phallic imagery. I was infinitely more interested in the story of Juan Diego's childhood, so the constant cutting back to the present where he debates whether to take Viagra or skip his beta blockers and has moderately embarrassing (to me!) sex with goddess/deities was Not the Thing for Me.

I also was confused about a plot point. One of Juan Diego's adopted parents is Flor, a prostitute. Flor is always referred to with feminine pronouns, Flor identifies as a woman, and Flor takes female hormones (and there's a really poignant section where she has to stop taking them because they interfere with her AIDS treatment and Juan Diego shaves her beard every day for her; I totally am tearing up right now just thinking about it). Yet Irving consistently calls Flor a transvestite. I fully admit my ignorance, but wouldn't that make Flor transgender? I always thought transvestites are men who identify as men but enjoy wearing women's clothes. Maybe Irving was trying to use the language that would have been in place in Juan Diego's childhood, but then I think he would have been sure to use 21st century terms in the present day narrative to contrast the terms. IDK

So, not my favorite, but I did cry a couple three times, so that's a point in Irving's favor.
kore: (Default)

[personal profile] kore 2016-04-06 12:15 am (UTC)(link)
....wow, that sounds better than a lot of Irving's recent books (he wrote one recently about crossdressing that sounded cringeworthy). He's like Updike and Cheever and other Johns of that era for me: great stylist, great at characterization etc., but a lot of the time the writer's assumed POV makes me feel really uncomfortable. Just all the assumptions and default views, if that makes sense.
zulu: Carson Shaw looking up at Greta Gill (Default)

[personal profile] zulu 2016-04-06 01:05 am (UTC)(link)
I really liked several of his--A Son of the Circus, A Prayer for Owen Meany, and The Cider House Rules. All were excellent, but all in the same way. A displaced middle-aged man reflects on his youth and the more magical things that happened then that he can't recreate. He doesn't fit in, he misses someone or something (that he may never have had to begin with), and he is artfully lonely in a way that can't be fixed even though he has people who love and support him. They're great books and I reread them; they can even, at times, be laugh-out-loud funny. But I don't feel the need to read any more.
likeadeuce: (Default)

[personal profile] likeadeuce 2016-04-06 01:36 am (UTC)(link)
I ended up enjoying this book a lot even though I saw all the problems with it...it made me want to read more Irving who I've never tried before....I bought Owen Meant off Amazon already.
spikedluv: (agent carter: peggy - red lipstick by a-)

[personal profile] spikedluv 2016-04-06 06:28 pm (UTC)(link)
It sounds like there's a lot of positive for you to concentrate on when you speak to Jon about it, but NGL, I'd pay good money to have you mention (not even in a negative way, just as a passing comment) that you noticed the sexual imagery and thought it was interesting. I want his reaction, please. *veg*
sallymn: (reading 1)

[personal profile] sallymn 2016-04-09 01:30 am (UTC)(link)
Sounds interesting but... not my style, I have to say.