Literary Wives Club: Novel About My Wife by Emily Perkins (2008)

Although Emily Perkins was a new name to me, the New Zealand author has published five novels and a short story collection. Unfortunately, I never engaged with her London-set Novel About My Wife. On the one hand, it must have been an intriguing challenge for Perkins to inhabit a man’s perspective and examine how a widower might recreate his marriage and his late wife’s mental state. “I can’t speak for Ann[,] obviously, only about her,” screenwriter Tom Stone admits. On the other hand, Tom is so egotistical and self-absorbed that his portrait of Ann is more obfuscating than illuminating.

“If I could build her again using words, I would,” he opens, but that promising start just leads into paragraphs of physical description. Bare facts, such as that Ann was from Sydney and created radiation masks for cancer patients in a hospital, are hardly revealing. We mostly know Ann through her delusions. In her late thirties, when she was three months pregnant with their son Arlo, she was caught in an underground train derailment. Thereafter, she increasingly fell victim to paranoia, believing that she was being stalked and that their house was infested. We’re invited to speculate that pregnancy exacerbated her mental health issues and that postpartum psychosis may have had something to do with her death.

I mostly skimmed the novel, so I may have missed some plot points, but what stood out to me were Tom’s unpleasant depictions of women and complaints about his faltering career. (He’s envious of a new acquaintance, Simon, who’s back and forth to Hollywood all the time for successful screenwriting projects.) Interspersed are seemingly pointless excerpts from Tom’s screenplay about a trip he and Ann took to Fiji. I longed for the balance of another perspective. This had a bit of the flavour of early Maggie O’Farrell, but none of the warmth. (Secondhand – Awesomebooks.com)

 

The main question we ask about the books we read for Literary Wives is:

What does this book say about wives or about the experience of being a wife?

Being generous to Perkins, perhaps the very point she was trying to make is that it’s impossible to get outside of one’s own perspective and understand what’s going on with a spouse, especially one who has mental health struggles. Had Tom been more attentive and supportive, might things have ended differently?

 

See Becky’s, Kate’s and Kay’s reviews, too! (Naomi is on a break this month.)


Coming up next, in December: The Soul of Kindness by Elizabeth Taylor.

22 responses

  1. whatmeread's avatar

    Postpartum depression, sure, but I’m guessing she got molested in Fiji by Tom’s boss, or something like that. He clearly knew something about her past that Tom didn’t know.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      That would make sense. I definitely missed the nuance of that situation because by that point I was just skimming.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        I guess you didn’t like the book much.

        Like

  2. whatmeread's avatar

    Or maybe he didn’t molest her but he knew something that she didn’t want anyone in her current life to know. That would be more mental than I was thinking, but it makes sense in the context of her imagined stalker.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Becky (Aidanvale)'s avatar

      I thought that she had probably been a victim of an assault, likely by him but potentially by someone else. It’s frustrating not to know.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        I thought by that old boss. But he was also a threat because he knew about her past, so it may not even have been an assault.

        Like

  3. loujudson's avatar

    When I saw the cover I thought it was about a woman’s wife, and was intrigued. But your review assures me I don’t want to read this, even if by a woman, abut a dysfunctional male. Thanks for the review!

    Like

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I don’t think we’ve read a book about a queer marriage yet; we really need to in future!

      Liked by 1 person

  4. Elle's avatar

    It might be an overly generous reading, but I wonder if Tom’s inability to actually convey a sense of the woman he loves is meant to be symptomatic of men in general as the less observant and thoughtful partners in marriages. Even if so, depressing, no thanks!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      That’s quite possible! Many of the books we read for this club give quite a depressing picture of marriage.

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        Gaaahh. Like all the motherhood-sucks novels out there!

        Like

  5. A Life in Books's avatar

    I’d also assumed this one to be about a single sex marriage from the cover. Perhaps that would have been more interesting.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Perhaps we should put Wife by Charlotte Mendelson on our list for the future.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. A Life in Books's avatar

        That might work well. It’s an interesting relationship.

        Like

  6. Kate W's avatar

    I urge you not to take this book as your Emily Perkins example! Her more recent books are quite different and much, much better.
    That said, I’m glad we’re back on more reliable ground with our next pick (Elizabeth Taylor).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I’ll keep that in mind.

      I’m really looking forward to reading another Elizabeth Taylor!

      Like

  7. Laura's avatar

    I remember seeing this about a LOT in 2008 – the cover is quite distinctive. Interesting how out of date this sounds now. I guess it is almost 20 years old (!).

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Huh, I had never heard of it before it made it onto our spreadsheet of possible reads.

      Liked by 1 person

  8. Becky (Aidanvale)'s avatar

    I didn’t have many positive thoughts toward the book so I appreciated your take on it to recognise the challenge from writing from the widower’s perspective. Still… it might have been nice for her to give us a better idea of what was actually going on for Ann 😉

    Liked by 1 person

  9. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    Wow, it sounds like you really didn’t like this one, but didn’t like the character or didn’t like the writing, I can’t tell. Or, both maybe.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Both, for sure. Three out of four of us felt the same this time.

      Like

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