First off, I'm generally not into twin books. With the exception of Sweet Valley High, it seems like twins are always portrayed in literature as freaks...like in The 13th Tale, Flowers in the Attic, and even, if I remember correctly, The Shining. I'm not a twin so it's not a personal thing, but I dislike the use over and over again of twins as strange little beings with co-dependent love/hate relationships. (Clearly that last sentence doesn't apply to The Shining - but those little freaky kid ghosts that the boy sees are twins, right?)
With that off my chest...Her Fearful Symmetry is about two sets of twins, Elspeth and Edie, and Edie's daughters, Julia and Valentina. When Elspeth dies of cancer, she leaves her apartment - across from Highgate Cemetery in London - and a good wad of cash to the younger, American twins, with the stipulation that they live in the flat for a year before they can sell it. Their parents are also not allowed to enter the apartment. Julia and Valentina are both inseperable but also fighting for their own identities, which ends up creating a lot of conflict. Valentina, the meeker twin, ends up getting involved with Robert, who lives downstairs and was Elspeth's longtime companion. Which Elspeth doesn't like - she's come back as a ghost who's trapped in the apartment with the girls. And off it goes...
The thing is, while the story is interesting in its retelling, I felt as though the events in Her Fearful Symmetry happened at a distance, like we were held apart from it. You saw the characters but you didn’t know really them. And while I think it's a valid style choice, and I'm guessing one made to make the plot turns a surprise, I didn't connect with Julia or Valentina or any of the rest of them.
Maybe it was a style choice, but I felt that Niffenegger broke an essential style rule, that of "show, don't tell." I think we were often told about the characters' personality traits, instead of seeing them on display – and so it was not always believable. Elspeth is probably the best example: For 300 pages, she’s a friendly ghost figure who never expresses any sort of meanness. Then one day, Robert says she’s manipulative: “Elspeth isn’t nice. Even when she was alive she wasn’t very – she was witty and beautiful and fantastically original in – certain ways, but now that she’s dead she seems to have lost some essential quality – compassion, or empathy, some human thing – I don’t think you should trust her, Valentina.” (p.303) I read that passage and I was like, what? As it turns out, Elspeth is manipulative but I don’t think one sentence here and there can create a believable shift when the previous 300 pages have shown otherwise. The same thing happens with Valentina – she's the Mouse throughout the book and then all of a sudden she does something so ridiculously absurd and bold. I just don’t think her characterization backed it up.
At the end, I found Her Fearful Symmetry to be kinda vague. Like, what happened with Julia and Martin on that last night? There’s an implication, but… And who was Elspeth, really? Was she devious and she allowed the mist to disperse – or was she really not able to fix it? The text is unclear and I found that to be annoying. Again, it's a style choice, but I've never liked having to guess at the unanswered questions.
Still, Niffenegger is so good at evoking beauty in the midst of pain, which I think is the true strength of The Time Traveler's Wife. My favorite passage in this book, Her Fearful Symmetry, comes on page 50: “As each night passed he found it more difficult to evoke Marijke precisely. He panicked and pinned up dozens of photographs of her all over the flat. Somehow this only made things worse. His actual memories began to be replaced by the images; his wife, a whole human being, was turning into a collection of dyes on small white rectangles of paper. Even the photographs were not as intensely colourful as they had once been, he could see that. Washing them didn’t help. Marijke was bleaching out of his memory. The harder he tried to keep her the faster she seemed to vanish.”
At the end, I found Her Fearful Symmetry to be kinda vague. Like, what happened with Julia and Martin on that last night? There’s an implication, but… And who was Elspeth, really? Was she devious and she allowed the mist to disperse – or was she really not able to fix it? The text is unclear and I found that to be annoying. Again, it's a style choice, but I've never liked having to guess at the unanswered questions.
Still, Niffenegger is so good at evoking beauty in the midst of pain, which I think is the true strength of The Time Traveler's Wife. My favorite passage in this book, Her Fearful Symmetry, comes on page 50: “As each night passed he found it more difficult to evoke Marijke precisely. He panicked and pinned up dozens of photographs of her all over the flat. Somehow this only made things worse. His actual memories began to be replaced by the images; his wife, a whole human being, was turning into a collection of dyes on small white rectangles of paper. Even the photographs were not as intensely colourful as they had once been, he could see that. Washing them didn’t help. Marijke was bleaching out of his memory. The harder he tried to keep her the faster she seemed to vanish.”
I also find her to be so ridiculously creative. In both books, she's come up with original plots, which I think is a hard feat these days. Probably my favorite scene in Her Fearful Symmetry is Martin's dream about sitting on the Tube and realizing the women across from him are squirrels. How awesome is that?
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