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The Wife's Tale
 
 

The Wife's Tale [Paperback]

Lori Lansens
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
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Product Description

Quill & Quire

In their introduction to The Oprah Affect, a collection of essays that analyze the impact of Oprah’s Book Club on popular and literary culture, editors Jaime Harker and Cecilia Konchar Farr argue there’s nothing new in the hit segment’s polarizing effect on both readers and critics. Since its inception, the novel has tended to divide devotees into irreconcilable camps, with each side clinging to its own narrow definition of a good read. On one side, according to Harker and Farr, are those who “seek books grounded in shared aesthetic … values,” those who prize the formal or “literary” over the sentimental. On the other – cue the theme music – are readers “who want books that engage them emotionally or socially,” novels that they can “take personally, novels that speak to, challenge, or transform their lives, novels that entertain them with stories or call them into political or social awareness, even action.” A quick scan of Lori Lansens’ book jackets and the multiple accolades printed there place her, it would seem, firmly on the side of the millions of Oprah’s Book Club members who want their fiction big-hearted and story-driven. Her second novel, The Girls, was selected for the Richard & Judy Book Club, the U.K. equivalent of Oprah’s literary love-in. Mary Gooch, the heroine of Lansens’ latest novel, The Wife’s Tale, is a typical Lansens protagonist – damaged, alienated, and resourceful, and her road to self-actualization is blocked by a box-store-sized stack of obstacles both external and internal. Chief among those obstacles is Mary’s weight, now topping the 300-pound mark on the eve of her 25th wedding anniversary. Lying naked in her nearly dark bedroom, waiting for her truck-driver husband Jimmy to come home, Mary gazes into the mirror, and sees a body “so gilded with fat that hardly a bone from her skeleton could insinuate itself in her reflection.” Mary has tried every diet and life resolution to shed her excess weight, but an irresistible hunger drives her to the kitchen to binge at all hours. Mary is stricken with hunger, but for what she can’t name or define – food makes do as a substitute. When Jimmy fails to return home that night or the next day for the couple’s anniversary party, Mary’s sad but predictable life is knocked off its moorings. The disappearance is soon explained by a vague letter from Jimmy, who has gone off to parts unknown to find “some time to think.” He promises to contact Mary eventually and informs her that he’s left the $25,000 he won from a scratch lottery ticket in their shared account. The stage is set for Mary, who barely knows how to use a bank card and has rarely set foot outside her small Ontario town, to embark on a journey both literal and spiritual. She travels to Toronto in search of Jimmy and then flies to Los Angeles, where his mother lives and where Mary meets a cast of misfits, searchers, and unlikely guides and friends. Mary’s mission to find her husband may be thwarted time and time again as the novel builds to a satisfying climax, but in the process she picks up a lifetime of lessons about her strengths and limitations. Lansens’ novels, for all their attention to characterization and period detail, and their refusal to shy away from such painful issues as racism, abuse, alienation, and poverty, are actually retellings of the classic Hero story, with a flawed individual undergoing a series of trials before eventually claiming his or her destiny. The Wife’s Tale falls comfortably into this category, and for the most part, that’s a good thing. Lansens, who has written several screenplays, has a knack for satisfactorily ending one scene while creating anticipation for the next – an underappreciated skill alien to many Canadian novelists. Mary’s adventures may tend toward the mundane and domestic, but an irresistible narrative thrust and character arc carry the reader from chapter to chapter. The early sections, which introduce readers to the daily humiliations of morbid obesity, are fascinating, touching, and unflinching, and set up readers for Mary’s triumphant rise. Better still, Lansens is not above sending up the conventions of the archetypal Oprah book, going so far as to have Mary initiate her first airplane flight by buying a handful of gold-stickered novels that “promise laughter and tears.” Opening the first of the novels, Mary is “instantly and gratefully transported to another place” by a “masterful storyteller.” A few of the novel’s Los Angeles chapters are uncomfortably stuck between fable and psychological portrait, the character strokes too broad in some sections, too fine in others. Jimmy is perhaps a little too understanding of his wife’s weaknesses, too much the ideal husband, to function as a completely believable character. That oversight may be intentional, though. After all, a truck driver named Jimmy Gooch is probably not this novel’s targeted reader. THIS REVIEW HAS BEEN CORRECTED. The print version of this review incorrectly stated that Oprah Winfrey owns the film rights to Lori Lansens' novel Rush Home Road. Q&Q regrets the error. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Review

"Lansens--who lived so memorably inside the heads of conjoined twins Ruby and Rose in "The Girls"--sketches another indelible female character here. Mary Gooch... [is] original... heartbreakingly funny and sad."-- Entertainment Weekly --This text refers to an alternate Paperback edition.

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (3)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
1.0 out of 5 stars just "blah", April 29 2010
By 
gl (the prairies) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Wife's Tale (Hardcover)
I couldn't wait to get my hands on the next Lori Lansens book. I loved loved loved The Girls and Rush Home Road. I can't say the same for A Wife's Tale. There was so much internal analysis going on (throughout the WHOLE book) and it got to be very boring. I didn't believe all the coincidental connections she made with the characters in California - it didn't ring true. I hardly read the last third of this book... I skimmed it because I couldn't wait for it to be over. And then the end had a loosey goosey wrap-up - my disappointment was cemented. I hate to say that this book, for me, was just blah.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful
3.0 out of 5 stars A good "feel good" book., Aug 20 2009
By 
Karoline (Richmond BC) - See all my reviews
(TOP 100 REVIEWER)   
This review is from: The Wife's Tale (Hardcover)
I found this book to be a touching read. Not touching in a sad sense, but more of a feel good touchy feeling. When I first started reading this book I just felt this wretching pity for Mary. She's grossly overweight, her husband just left her, and she was so dependent on him so obviously she's lost and doesn't know what to do at first. I wanted to just take her by the shoulders and shake her. The pity and sadness just deepens further when Mary goes to California to her mother in law's place thinking her husband is there. I hated her mother in law. She's everything I would never ever want to have in an in law. Eden's (mother in law) callousness and spite just makes her look like your typical old mother viper. She sort of gets her come uppins towards the end of the book but, well, you do change your opinion of her after that. However as the story progresses, from pity, you then feel very supportive of Mary and you start backing her up (that "you go girl" feeling becomes more present)

What will never change throughout this book is Mary's very open and willingness to help others despite what they think of her. She has this strange uncanny ability to make acquaintances as she meets them and she's so friendly that even strangers help her at random encounters. Which does sort of bother me, however perhaps it's because I have a rather pessimistic view and would never rely on strangers to help me. I couldn't, for example go up to random people on the parking lot to ask for a ride (which Mary did...and succeeded). That doesn't really strike up as realistic to me, however I put that thought aside, it's just a story, after all.

I especially enjoyed Mary's makeover at the salon. I liked how other women around her supported her, and even comforted her as she told her story of how her husband left, and how she's off to find him. It was a great moment and my most favorite part of the book. Plot flow was great! no blips or bumps! No side tracking to anything. There were times where Mary would be flooded with memories and flashbacks. However I thought it was an essential part of the story, so you could understand her relationship with her husband. I liked the ending, it gave me a sense of optimism and it looked like Mary was indeed off to a fine start.

Overall a good, nice, comforting touchy feely story. One I would recommend to those that like a "feel good" book.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Lansens is my favourite author...., Sep 6 2009
By 
Luanne Ollivier - See all my reviews
(TOP 10 REVIEWER)    (#1 HALL OF FAME)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The Wife's Tale (Hardcover)
A blogger is sometimes asked "What's your favourite book?' I have discovered many authors that I absolutely love. But when pressed, my all time favourite is Canadian Lori Lansens. Her first novel Rush Home Road - and Addy Shadd, the indomitable, remarkable protagonist - has stayed with me since it was written in 2002.

Newly released by Random House Canada, The Wife's Tale is Lansen's third book. I have been anticipating this one for months.....

Mary Gooch is a resident of Baldoon County, a fictionalized setting in the Chatham, Ontario area used for all three of Lansen's novels.

Mary lives with her husband Jimmy Gooch in the small town of Leaford. Mary is overweight, very overweight and has been for most of her life.

"Mary remembered, when she was nine years old, stepping off the scale in Dr. Ruttle's office and hearing him whisper the word to her slight mother, Irma. It was an unfamiliar word, but one she understood in the context of the fairy-tale world. Obeast. There were witches and warlocks. So must there be ogres and obeasts. Little big Mary wasn't confused by the diagnosis. It made sense to her child's mind that her body had become an outward manifestation of the starving animal in her gut."

Trapped within a mountain of flesh and powerless to control 'her raging hunger', she waits for Jimmy to come home. She is planning a party for their 25th wedding anniversary. Mary sits reminiscing and we are privy to her past and the emotions that come with it - the joy, sadness, anguish and... 'her hunger was ever present, but her self loathing came in waves." As she waits, she is struck by a sense of foreboding. When Jimmy doesn't return...

"It struck her that there must be some other door left open through which she'd let out Gooch."

Mary has been cocooned in the small, insulated world of Leaford. Gooch always wanted Mary to come with him in his furniture truck on deliveries to other locales, but Mary always resisted. With nothing but a receipt from a Toronto restaurant to go on, Mary braves the world and strikes out to find Jimmy.

What follows is an amzing journey on so many levels. I don't want to spoil the book, so I'm not going to give you much more of the plot. This is a book that deserves to be unfolded for each and every reader's discovery.

Why do I love Lori Lansen's writing so much? Her characters. They become so real - I get so invested in their stories. Mary's hurt, pain, bewilderment and awakening evoke such strong emotions. I ache when Mary is treated cruelly and rejoice when kindness comes from unlikely sources. The supporting cast of characters are no less vividly drawn. Each of them has their own hunger to battle.

Lansen's deft turn with a phrase, a description, create an achingly real portrait of a woman whose driving, tearing, roaring hunger has robbed her of much of life. Her journey to reclaimation is thought provoking and gut wrenching.

I thought about Mary Gooch long after I turned the last page. Yet again, Lansens has captured me. When asked about my favourite now, I will have to answer with both Rush Home Road and The Wife's Tale.

Lansen has created a great website. There are photo albums depicting the settings in the book, a great book club discussion page

Has anyone else read this yet? What are your thoughts? How did you feel about Mary Gooch?
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