Hartford Courant (Sunday)

Franzen’s ‘Crossroads’ a mellow heartbreak­er

1970s-era church pastor and family suffer crises of faith and of morality

- By Dwight Garner

Jonathan Franzen’s new novel, “Crossroads,” is the first in a projected trilogy, which is reason to be wary. Good trilogies rarely announce themselves as such at the start. And the overarchin­g title for the series, “A Key to All Mythologie­s,” may be a nod to “Middlemarc­h,” but it also sounds as if Franzen were channeling Joseph Cornell, or Robert Bly, or Tolkien, or Yes.

And yet here’s the novel itself, and it’s a mellow, marzipan-hued ’70s-era heartbreak­er. “Crossroads” is warmer than anything he has yet written, wider in its human sympathies, weightier of image and intellect. If I missed some of the acid of his earlier novels, well, this one has powerful compensati­ons.

“Crossroads” is a big novel, nearly 600 pages. Franzen patiently clears space for the slow rise and fall of character, for the chiming of his themes and for a freight of events — a car wreck, rape, suicide attempts, adultery, drug deals, arson — that arrive only slowly, as if revealed in sunlight creeping steadily across a lawn.

The novel is set in suburban Chicago. At its center are the Hildebrand­ts, another of the author’s seemingly solid Midwestern families — such as the Probsts in “The Twenty-Seventh City” (1988), the Hollands in “Strong Motion” (1992), the Lamberts in “The Correction­s” (2001) and the Berglunds in “Freedom” (2010) — with eggshell foundation­s.

This is a novel with strong religious themes. In Franzen’s fiction, families are their own form of religion, with options for salvation and purificati­on, and just as many for apostasy. Perhaps the biggest danger, in his families, is to misread one’s position in them.

The title of his new book refers to the name of a popular youth group at a local church, but it has a second meaning. The family patriarch, Russ Hildebrand­t, is also the church’s idealistic associate pastor and an unreconstr­ucted blues fan, and he lends his Robert Johnson records to a younger, adorable, widowed church member he’d like to sleep with. (Russ is married.)

You know the legend about Johnson: He met the devil at the crossroads of Highways 49 and 61 in Clarksdale, Mississipp­i, where he exchanged his soul for mastery of the guitar. Throughout this novel, each of the major characters — Russ, his wife, Marion, and three of their children, Clem, Becky and Perry — suffer crises of faith and of morality. They stand at their own crossroads

and study what the devil has on offer.

For Russ, who has suffered a variety of profession­al humiliatio­ns, the crisis is one of authentici­ty. His potential lover puts Johnson on the turntable (“I went down to the cross road, babe, I looked both east and west/ Lord, I didn’t have no sweet woman, babe, in my distress”), and the sound

plunges Russ “into the hissing, low-fidelity world from which Robert Johnson was singing. He’d never felt more pierced by the beauty of the blues, the painful sublimity of Johnson’s voice, but also never more damned by it.”

When younger, Russ had marched with Stokely Carmichael; he had helped desegregat­e local pools.

But in his suburban church, he fears he’s “a latter-day parasite — a fraud. It came to him that all white people were frauds, a race of parasitic wraith-people, and none more so than he.” His kids, increasing­ly, view him with disgust. Clem asks, “Do you have any idea how embarrassi­ng it is to be your son?”

Like Franzen himself at times, in the public arena if not on the page, Russ is so intolerabl­e and so uncool, such an ungainly apparition from an earlier era, that you sense him on the verge of redemption, of coming out the other side.

The Hildebrand­t kids are all right, or so they seem at first. But Clem, who

has gone off to college, is returning with news (he has volunteere­d to fight in Vietnam) that will gravely wound his pacifist father. Becky is a strait-laced high school social sovereign — everything she does is front-page drive-in news — who discovers the countercul­ture degradatio­ns of sex and drugs and rock ’n’ roll, albeit not in that order. Her younger brother, Perry, is a high-IQ misfit and drug dealer. He’s like a bowling ball spinning, at velocity, toward some unknown target.

The character who cracks this novel fully open — she’s one of the glorious characters in recent American fiction — is Marion, Russ’ wife.

When we first meet her, she’s a frump, virtually a nonentity, an overweight pastor’s spouse, invisible except as a “warm cloud of momminess.” Russ, who puts people in mind of Atticus Finch and a young Charlton Heston, is embarrasse­d by Marion and “her sorry hair, her unavailing makeup, her seemingly

self-spiting choice of dress.”

Marion is another of Franzen’s awkward, mortified women, including Enid Lambert and Patty Berglund, who come full circle. Franzen methodical­ly begins to peel back the layers of Marion’s life, layers that are largely unknown to her husband and family: her months in a mental hospital when in her 20s, her doomed affair with a married car dealer out West, an abortion available only at the mercy of a man who rapes her repeatedly over many days.

Marion, in midnovel, wakes up. “She was a mother of four,” she realizes, “with a 20-year-old’s heart.” She’s not a good person, she tells herself. She lies, she steals jewelry. Later in the novel she punctures whatever is left of Russ’ vanity. Sometimes, only the devil’s logic seems to apply to her. She can resemble a character out of Muriel Spark’s fiction, a thwarted girl of slender means who becomes an unlikely hero.

 ?? SHELBY GRAHAM ?? Jonathan Franzen is the author of five previous novels, including“The Correction­s”and“Freedom.”His latest,“Crossroads,”is the first volume of a projected trilogy called “A Key to All Mythologie­s.”
SHELBY GRAHAM Jonathan Franzen is the author of five previous novels, including“The Correction­s”and“Freedom.”His latest,“Crossroads,”is the first volume of a projected trilogy called “A Key to All Mythologie­s.”
 ?? ?? ‘Crossroads’
By Jonathan Franzen; Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 580 pages, $30
‘Crossroads’ By Jonathan Franzen; Farrar, Straus & Giroux, 580 pages, $30

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