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Fifth Child
 
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Fifth Child [Paperback]

Doris Lessing
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (24 customer reviews)
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From Amazon

The married couple in this novel pull off a remarkable achievement: They purchase a three-story house with oodles of bedrooms, and, on a middle-class income, in the '70s, fill it to the brim with happy children and visiting relatives. Their holiday gatherings are sumptuous celebrations of life and togetherness. And then the fifth child arrives. He's just a child--he's not supernatural. But is he really human? This is an elegantly written tale that the New York Times called "a horror story of maternity and the nightmare of social collapse . . . a moral fable of the genre that includes Mary Shelley's Frankenstein and George Orwell's 1984." --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

From Publishers Weekly

Lessing's latest novel is profoundly disquieting, not only for the story it tells but also for the message it conveys. Harriet and David, both conservative, old-fashioned and out of step with the liberated '60s, meet in London and know immediately that they are meant to marry. They buy a white elephant of a house in the suburbs and begin to fill its many bedrooms with children. Smugly determined to create a happy family, they unashamedly sponge off David's father and exploit Harriet's mother as an unpaid nanny. The first four children are adorable, but when Harriet becomes pregnant for the fifth time, she realizes that this baby is different. Painfully active in the womb, newborn Ben seems more like a monster than child; Harriet thinks he is a throwback to humanity's primitive forebears. Howling and raging, enormously strong, Ben inspires fear and horror. After he strangles two pets and menaces his siblings, David sends him away to an institution. Harriet is compelled to bring him home, but his presence irrevocably destroys family harmony. Ben eventually finds his niche with a group of dropouts who become thugs, thieves and muggers. There this horror story ends, and we are left with Lessing's indictment of those in authority who refuse to acknowledge responsibility for the violence inherent in mankind. More disquieting, in equating Ben with the lower and, she intimates, uncivilized strata of society, Lessing seems to assert a message of upper-class superiority. The implications of this slim, gripping work are ominous. 30,000 first printing; Literary Guild main selection.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Customer Reviews

24 Reviews
5 star:
 (9)
4 star:
 (8)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (4)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (24 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Abnormality Embodied, Oct 28 2001
By 
E. Filardi "efilardi" (New York United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Fifth Child (Paperback)
Doris Lessing is one of the most important writers of the second half of the twentieth century. Lessing has written about the clash of cultures, the gross injustices of racial inequality, the struggle among opposing elements within an individuals own personality, and the conflict between the individual conscience and the collective good. However, her novel The Fifth Child seems to bring to light the twisted social an moral values of today's society. Or does it?

Lessing tells us the chilling story of the Lovatts. In the unconstrained atmosphere of England in the late 1960's, Harriet and David Lovatt seem to defy the greedy and selfish spirit of the times with their version of tradition and normalcy. They want a large family, all the expected pleasures of a rich and responsible home life, children growing, Harriet tending, David providing. Even as the time's events take a dark turn, with a sudden surge in crime and unemployment, the Lovatt's cling to their belief that an obstinately guarded contentedness will preserve them from the world outside. Until the birth of their fifth child.

Harriet and David are stricken with astonishment at their new infant. Almost "gruesome in appearance, insatiably hungry, abnormally strong, demanding and violent," Ben has nothing infant-like about him, nothing innocent or wholesome, nothing normal by society's standards. Harriet and David understand immediately that he will never be accepted in their world. David cannot bring himself to touch him. Harriet finds she cannot love him as she should love her own child. The four other children are afraid of him. Family and friends who once enjoyed visiting with the Lovatt's begin to stay away.

Now, in this house, where there had been nothing but kindness, warmth, and comfort, there is restraint, wariness, and anxiety. Harriet and David are torn, as they would never have believed possible, between their instincts as parents and their shocked reaction to this fierce and unlovable baby. Their vision of the world as a carefree and ultimately happy place is desperately threatened by the mere existence of one of their own children. As the novel continues, we are drawn deep into the life of the Lovatt family, and are witness to the terrifying confusion of emotions that becomes their daily life as they cope with Ben and with their own responses to him throughout his childhood and adolescence.

Lessing's plot is absolutely brilliant. It was thought out, detailed, and the setting she chose enhances the story. A major problem, however, is that the novel seems to have left something out from Ben and his inner feelings. We never really get to hear his point of view, we cannot understand his reasoning on matters, nor can we relate to him in any way. Lessing should have developed Ben's character more, and brought him closer to the reader. We're left with an empty feeling, a craving for more. The reader wonders if Ben can understand what he is, or what he is doing. Overall, Lessing gave us a wonderful tale, and was only hindered by her use of character development (or lack thereof).

What is Doris Lessing trying to give us? A reflection of society's unwillingness to confront its own most horrific aspects? Is it meant to be a challenge for us to change? Readers have questioned the reasons for Lessing writing this novel. According to her, it is nothing more than a horrifying, yet realistic, story. I agree with her, and think that this story is only that: a story. Readers should not expect a moral at the end of this tale. Susan Sontag states, in her essay Against Interpretation, that "From now to the end of consciousness, we are stuck with the task of defending art." With this novel, we must do the exact opposite, there is no ambiguity involved. Doris Lessing is able to weave complex stories that are amazingly enjoyable to read. As a writer, she is one of the best at capturing the interests of her readers.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Enduring fate, Mar 30 2008
By 
I LOVE BOOKS (Italy) - See all my reviews
(TOP 500 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: Fifth Child (Paperback)
Harriet and David Lovatt are a happy, newly married couple. Unaffected by the swinging 60s, they have strong, old-fashioned family values. A huge beautiful house is bought in the English countryside and, one after the other, four children add to their domestic bliss. As the years go by the house becomes a jubilation of laughter and hospitality with relatives and friends joining the Lovatts every Christmas, Easter and summer. Harriet becomes pregnant again and their fifth child is born. The new baby proves to be a very difficult and strange one. Defiant from the very beginning, both parents struggle to come to terms with his unusual fierce and hostile character. Harriet is distraught and everybody becomes affected by the presence of the latest addition to the family. But... how to deal with it all?

I found the prose flawless in its utter simplicity, conveying a chilling feeling that nothing should be taken for granted. You just knew something was bound to happen and the fact that there are no chapters in this book made this feeling more perceptible by the minute. Impossible to put down. The transformation of Harriet especially, from happy-mum to concerned-then-desperate-mum is rendered vividly and what's more, a strong affection is conveyed for that strange child yearning to fit in but failing. At least, that is what I felt by reading this book, my first one by Ms. Lessing. Better late than never. I am truly looking forward to the sequel `Ben, In the World'.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The Fifth Child, May 15 2002
By 
Rachel Booth (Seattle, WA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Fifth Child (Paperback)
This book is one of the most thought provoking books I've ever read. It really made me think about my own family and also about other people's family values.
Doris May Lessing was most diffinately put a moral into this story that over the course of the book is hard to figure out but in the end is very clear. I believe the book is really about society and how it turns away and tries to forget about the abnormal or strange.
I loved the way Doris May Lessing wrote this book. It is written in a very straight forward way. If this book has any flaws, it is the lack of character development.
I would recomend this book but I'm not sure to who.
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