rachelmanija: (Books: old)
rachelmanija ([personal profile] rachelmanija) wrote2020-02-13 04:27 pm

The Goldfinch, by Donna Tartt

Now THIS is the book I’ve been waiting for from Tartt after the frustrating disappointment of The Little Friend. This is an old-school sprawling epic about trauma, grief, art, love, denial, and much, much more. After a slow start, I ended up extremely emotionally engaged and look forward to requesting it for Yuletide.

If you liked The Secret History, you will probably like this; if you didn’t, you probably won’t. Though the plots and most of the characters are completely different, the narrative voice is similar and there’s a hard-to-pin-down feel that’s also similar. If Richard Papen drove you up the wall, Theo Decker probably will too.

When the book begins, Theo is a Manhattan teenager living with his beloved mother after his abusive father skipped town, to their relief. His life is shattered when his mother dies under extremely traumatizing circumstances, propelling Theo into a series of different milieus to which he takes his troubles with him.

I read this mostly unspoiled, which was a very rewarding experience, so I’m putting the rest of the plot below a cut. Above the cut, I will just note a few things which readers might want to know about in advance.

Content notes: The dog lives. There is significant gay/bisexual content though a lot of the usual questions that brings up (“Canon or subtext?” “Do they survive?” “Is it a happily ever after?”) are hard to answer due to spoilery/complicated in-book circumstances. There is a lot of addiction, suicidality, and non-sexual child abuse/neglect.

Also, there are Russian characters who I am going to guess are probably not very accurate as I cannot recall a single instance of Russians I know thinking a book by a non-Russian author was accurate.

[personal profile] osprey_archer just reviewed this; if you’ve read it, feel free to jump into the discussion in her comments.



All I knew going in was that it involved art forgery and that there was either canon gay or very heavy subtext. Consequently, I kept thinking that every teenage boy Theo had significant interactions was the relationship in question. First I thought it was Tom and had an “ugh, no” reaction. Then Andy became very important and I read on with increasing bewilderment at how the heck this relationship was going to end up romantic: some kind of “grew up hot?”

Enter Boris, at which point I instantly knew that the relationship was Theo/Boris. Also, my involvement with the book took a huge leap forward. Boris is a great, vivid character and for all his and Theo’s faults, I spent the entire rest of the book consumed with the desire for them to be together.

They have regular drunk/high sex as teenagers that they don’t discuss, so yes, that part is canon. It’s unclear whether Theo is bisexual or gay, but either way, he is in love with Boris (explicit canon) and in an incredible level of denial over that and, it turns out, much more.

Theo is a giant fuckup who does awful things, but I can’t dislike him when he loves Boris so much, and rescues Popchik, and takes Boris to meet Popchik years later. The whole Popper plot was so unexpectedly satisfying, especially as I was sure it was going to come to a tragic end.

The successive revelations of exactly how suicidal Theo has been all along were such gut-punches. Since I find it impossible to believe that he will ever get a competent therapist he actually talks to, I will just believe that he and Boris meet up regularly for intense sessions of love and sex, in between Boris living the rest of his life, which is so much bigger and broader than anything Theo would ever want.

I also really want to know what Pippa does with her life, from her own point of view. That is likely to be my other Yuletide request, along with “Boris/Theo post-book.”



The Goldfinch: A Novel (Pulitzer Prize for Fiction)

laurashapiro: a woman sits at a kitchen table reading a book, cup of tea in hand. Table has a sliced apple and teapot. A cat looks on. (Default)

[personal profile] laurashapiro 2020-02-14 01:03 am (UTC)(link)
God, I loved 85% of the book and I hated the last 15% with a fiery passion. The violence of the ending just seemed so inexplicable to me, even in a book that starts with a bomb and has so much suicidality in it. Dude, you just killed a guy. I guess that's okay? IDK. I can't deal with how there's no fallout from it. It just kinda...happened. Tell me what you think of the ending!
laurashapiro: a woman sits at a kitchen table reading a book, cup of tea in hand. Table has a sliced apple and teapot. A cat looks on. (Default)

[personal profile] laurashapiro 2020-02-14 02:35 am (UTC)(link)
I guess the aftermath of it didn't land very heavily with me -- it felt rushed, or something. I'm glad it worked better for you, though. I seem to be the lone weirdo on this one, from the reviews I've seen.
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[personal profile] viridian5 2020-02-14 04:05 am (UTC)(link)
I felt that the aftermath was rushed and lets Theo off too easily.
laurashapiro: a woman sits at a kitchen table reading a book, cup of tea in hand. Table has a sliced apple and teapot. A cat looks on. (Default)

[personal profile] laurashapiro 2020-02-14 04:06 am (UTC)(link)
VIRIDIAN5 OMG HI
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[personal profile] viridian5 2020-02-14 04:26 am (UTC)(link)
Hi! ~~waves~~
osprey_archer: (Default)

[personal profile] osprey_archer 2020-02-14 01:11 am (UTC)(link)
It's weird how much it's like The Secret History when they're also so completely different. But yeah, Theo definitely feels very similar to Richard Papen, although also very much his own thing - more self-destructive than Richard, less obsessed with fitting in? Although clearly obsessed with presenting what he considers an acceptable face to society, which definitely doesn't include fully acknowledging his attraction to Boris, even if he very occasionally breaks down to admit that he loves Boris. (Their parting in Vegas, my God!)

I also super loved Popchyk. Such a cute dog! And Boris's adoration of Popchyk, too, it's so sweet, and it adds a little bit of lightness to the novel, which is otherwise pretty heavy, even though Theo only occasionally acknowledges just how suicidal he is.
osprey_archer: (Default)

[personal profile] osprey_archer 2020-02-14 01:21 am (UTC)(link)
Would Boris: last about a month at Hampden College before getting bored and going elsewhere (but leave behind a reputation that lasts for decades), OR stay the whole four years and become the benign but deadly kingpin of the Hampden College drug trade? And probably sleep with at least half of his professors and a large percentage of the student body.
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[personal profile] marjorie1170 2020-02-14 01:40 am (UTC)(link)
I was completely engaged by The Secret History (which surprised me give the premise). Thank you for reminding me of this one. I need to pick it up. (Squinting past the comments/descriptions so as not to be spoiled.)

[personal profile] grayduck 2020-02-14 02:09 am (UTC)(link)
Did you catch the (very tiny) guest appearance of a Secret History character in the Goldfinch?

The Secret History is one of my all-time favorite books. I too was really disappointed by The Little Friend, but loved the Goldfinch. I just wish she wouldn't take 10 years to write a book.
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[personal profile] asakiyume 2020-02-14 04:22 am (UTC)(link)
Hahaha, so great that the two of you were reading this and reviewed it on the same day.

The successive revelations of exactly how suicidal Theo has been all along were such gut-punches. ... since I have someone in my life who I deeply worry is that person, I am all the more sure this book is not for me, but I've enjoyed both your and Osprey Archer's reviews.