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1 internautes sur 1 ont trouvé ce commentaire utile :
5.0étoiles sur 5
Deeply textured and obsessively detailed work, Déc 28 2003
American Pastoral is a brilliant work of literature. If you're looking for a novel that moves along rapidly and spends little time on character development and analysis, you might want to pass. However, if you're looking for a slower, deeply textured and obsessively detailed work, go for it.This was a strange reading experience for me. The author, Philip Roth who won a Pulitzer Prize for this book, accurately describes precise locations - neighborhood, street, three-family-house, school yard, synagogue - where I grew up in Newark, New Jersey. He should know since he grew up there himself as did my parents at the same time in 1920's and 1930's. There is a vivid depiction of the 1967 Newark riots. Being nearby as a 16-year old, I recall that one day there was fire and smoke and tanks rolling down the street and the next day there were block after block of boarded up, bombed out buildings. Swede Levov, the book's protagonist, is a high school superstar. He is a first generation Jewish-American kid who is tall, blond, and athletic. He aspires to everything that many of the turn of the century immigrants wanted for their children, for them to assimilate fully and realize the American dream. For Swede, the American dream is transformed into a nightmare. As the book jacket aptly states, "overnight Swede is wrenched out of the longed-for American pastoral and into the indigenous American berserk." Swede marries a Catholic girl from Elizabeth who is crowned Miss New Jersey, takes over his father's glove manufacturing company in Newark, and moves with his new wife to a suburb about 40 miles to the west despite his overbearing father's protests. They have a daughter Meredith who they affectionately call Merry and who, as she grows up, is anything but merry. She stutters when she speaks and when she speaks, and shrieks, it is often in protest. Merry gets swept up in the radical protest politics of the 1960's - civil rights, Vietnam. She learns how to make bombs and, still a high school student, is implicated in the explosion of the post office in her quiet suburban town. The blast kills a well respected and beloved local doctor and Swede's American dream. A perfect life in the perfect suburb is quickly transformed into domestic disaster. Swede, early on and before the fall, is presented as a hero who strides and glides through life, full of grace, admired by all, and unperturbed until the increasingly inescapable underbelly of American life as we know it today catches up with him. The dinner party at the end of the book brings Swede face to face, hilariously and tragically, with many of the contradictions and questions that come to besiege him. As Swede the hero becomes the prototypical when-bad-things-happen-to-good-people tortured soul, American Pastoral leaves me thinking that there's a little of Swede in all of us and, what was once the American dream is at best an anachronism or was, just beneath the surface, never more than an illusion.
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