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Loading... Mr. Bridge: A Novel (original 1969; edition 2005)by Evan S. Connell (Author)
Work InformationMr. Bridge by Evan S. Connell (1969)
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listened to it on Audible after reading Mrs. Bridges. It was written about 10 years later and one can see (hear) the difference. a lot longer book, but still, very concise and direct. each chapter has a title.."The Glove, Avrum...This is Mr. Bridges view of his life. He feels his responsibility is to financially take care of the family, act correct, behave correct...He is very opinionated and dictatorial. He loves his wife and shows it by making sure she has enough money, a maid, a nice house and doesn't work. He does not understand that she has "nothing to do " all day. Very good book ( ) A joyless life rendered so plaintively and pathetically. Mr Bridge could've just been another typical angry, miserable story of the mid-century, upper-middle class, white American man genre, as written by some of Connell's well-known contemporaries. But somehow Connell imbues Mr Bridge with a hyper-realism - for example, instead of a blustery self-righteousness of a cartoon family man of the period, the contradictory self-righteousness that explains and summarises his entire personality, humanises him without excusing him - that makes this a frustratingly brilliant read. Just as Mrs Bridge's pristine suitcase covers encapsulates her whole personality for me, Mr Bridge's showily understated Christmas "present" of stocks to the whole family+Harriet which he then takes back in the name of safekeeping just punched me through the page. It has been ages since I've read Mrs Bridge, but I find Mr Bridge to be just as good a standalone novel. And seeing as I've forgotten most of the incidents that Mrs covered, I look forward to one day reading them both together as I'm sure there're some two-sided gems to uncover. This is the companion novel to Mrs. Bridge, and is written in the same form with vignettes that provide a unique character study. As with Mrs, Bridge, it is set in Kansas City where Mr. Bridge is a successful attorney. The Bridges have two daughters and one son. Mrs. Bridge defers to her husband as the absolute authority in the home. Her role is to oversee the housekeeper and raise the children while he earns the living that keeps them all comfortable. He loves his family, but sometimes their needs are secondary to his career. He is a staunch, conservative Republican, and suspicious of anyone who does not share his value system. He is described as "the consummate Puritan" by someone, which seems accurate based on his inner thoughts and his actions. His older daughter challenges his beliefs by sharing her life in New York with "Negroes" and "homosexuals." He is rigid in his beliefs, pompous, elitist and unsentimental, which is probably standard in that era for someone from humble beginnings who succeeded financially. He also has rare moments of insight into his personality that show his humanity. I was particularly struck by the time when he succumbed to his son's persistent requests to play baseball on the street with the son and his friends. Knowing that he lacked athletic ability, he ventured out in front of the neighborhood where he embarrassed himself and his son with his lack of prowess in hitting the ball. There is very little plot in this book, but it is an engrossing look at life in the mid-nineteenth century and his perspective on life with Mrs. Bridge. Poor Mr. Bridge, he has built his life based on respectability and stability and forgotten to truly enjoy it. He sees danger everywhere and, while loving and protecting his family, seeks to control everything they experience. He can't succeed, of course, and when events threaten to intrude on the cocoon he has woven, he responds by becoming numb. Eventually he is so numb, he cannot conceive of what it would be like to fully live. occasionally brilliant and full of pathos but lacks the emotional impact and compassion of Mrs Bridge. a detailed study of stifled repressed masculinity, most moving in its evocations of erotically charged father daughter relations and long term love. but do we really need another book that centres a white male bigot? i don't think so. it dates badly. aside from an extended character study, i didn't enjoy mr. bridge's company. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesThe Bridges (2) Is contained inNotable Lists
A lawyer with a growing stockpile of securities in the bank, three beautiful children, a compliant and decorative wife, and a lovely house in the suburbs, Walter Bridge has achieved all that is expected of someone of his race and background. But try as he might to control the lives of those around him, they prove perversely independent. In Mr. Bridge and its companion, Mrs. Bridge, Evan S. Connell has brilliantly realized the lives of upper-middle-class Americans living in the years just before and during World War II. No library descriptions found. |
LibraryThing Early Reviewers AlumEvan S. Connell's book Mr. Bridge was available from LibraryThing Early Reviewers. Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature English (North America) American fiction 20th Century 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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