- A Map of the World
infobox Book | < -- See Wikipedia:WikiProject_Novels or Wikipedia:WikiProject_Books -->
name = A Map of the World
orig title =
translator =
image_caption =
author =Jane Hamilton
cover_artist =
country =United States
language = English
series =
genre =Novel
publisher = Doubleday
release_date = 1994
media_type = Print (hardcover andpaperback )
pages = 390 pp (first edition hardcover)
isbn = ISBN 0-385-47310-9 (first edition hardcover)
preceded_by =
followed_by ="A Map of the World" (1994) is a novel by
Jane Hamilton . It was theOprah's Book Club selection for December 1999. It was made into a movie released in 1999 starringSigourney Weaver ,Julianne Moore ,David Strathairn ,Chloë Sevigny ,Louise Fletcher andMarc Donato with a soundtrack byPat Metheny .Plot summary
The book is concerned with how one seemingly inconsequential moment can alter lives forever. Alice Goodwin, mother of two, school nurse and wife of an aspiring dairy farmer in Wisconsin, is getting ready to take her two daughters and her best friend, Theresa's two little girls to their farm pond to swim. When she goes upstairs to find her bathing suit, Lizzy, Theresa's 2-year-old, slips away to the pond and drowns. It all goes downhill from there. The town tramp, whom Alice reprimanded for constantly bringing her sick son to school, accuses Alice of molesting her child. The entire town turns on the Goodwin family, fairly new to the area, and several other mothers come forward with tales of Alice's "abuse". Imprisonment, trial and loss of the farm ensue and Alice's husband and Theresa become "involved."
The novel is essentially about a search for authenticity in the contemporary American midwest. A couple struggles to maintain their lives on a farm, keep to ethical practices of both farming and living, and to raise their two young children, but American society stymies their efforts. The novel is an indictment of the U.S. legal system, which works with the subtlety and mercy of a sledgehammer; the farming system, which values dollars over good food and the environment; and the American idea of marriage, which is falling apart from its own internal contradictions. However, the novel manages to be very funny throughout. Its humor comes out not just in the wicked, scathing sentences of its first third, told in a voice that one imagines is close to the author's own, but also in the structural choice of placing section two in the voice of the hilariously but tragically non-verbal husband. The contrast between husband's and wife's thinking is far more eloquent and entertaining than the recent popular psychological studies on the subject of male-female mental processes. Also included: the annoyingly efficient but oblivious mother-in-law, class and race differences but from a female perspective, and the politics of a small town.
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