The Virgin Suicides: A Novel
The Virgin Suicides: A Novel book cover

The Virgin Suicides: A Novel

Hardcover – April 1, 1993

Price
$16.86
Format
Hardcover
Pages
249
Publisher
Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0374284381
Dimensions
5.24 x 0.98 x 8.12 inches
Weight
12 ounces

Description

From Publishers Weekly Eugenides's tantalizing, macabre first novel begins with a suicide, the first of the five bizarre deaths of the teenage daughters in the Lisbon family; the rest of the work, set in the author's native Michigan in the early 1970s, is a backward-looking quest as the male narrator and his nosy, horny pals describe how they strove to understand the odd clan of this first chapter, which appeared in the Paris Review , where it won the 1991 Aga Khan Prize for fiction. The sensationalism of the subject matter (based loosely on a factual account) may be off-putting to some readers, but Eugenides's voice is so fresh and compelling, his powers of observation so startling and acute, that most will be mesmerized. The title derives from a song by the fictional rock band Cruel Crux, a favorite of the Lisbon daughter Lux--who, unlike her sisters Therese, Mary, Bonnie and Cecilia, is anything but a virgin by the tale's end. Her mother forces Lux to burn the album along with others she considers dangerously provocative. Mr. Lisbon, a mild-mannered high school math teacher, is driven to resign by parents who believe his control of their children may be as deficient as his control of his own brood. Eugenides risks sounding sophomoric in his attempt to convey the immaturity of high-school boys; while initially somewhat discomfiting, the narrator's voice (representing the collective memories of the group) acquires the ring of authenticity. The author is equally convincing when he describes the older locals' reactions to the suicide attempts. Under the narrator's goofy, posturing banter are some hard truths: mortality is a fact of life; teenage girls are more attracted to brawn than to brains (contrary to the testimony of the narrator's male relatives). This is an auspicious debut from an imaginative and talented writer. Literary Guild selection. Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc. From Library Journal Eugenides's remarkable first novel opens on a startling note: "On the morning the last Lisbon daughter took her turn at suicide... the two paramedics arrived at the house knowing exactly where the knife drawer was, and the gas oven, and the beam in the basement from which it was possible to tie a rope." What follows is not, however, a horror novel, but a finely crafted work of literary if slightly macabre imagination. In an unnamed town in the slightly distant past, detailed in such precise and limpid prose that readers will surely feel that they grew up there, Cecilia--the youngest and most obviously wacky of the luscious Lisbon girls--finally succeeds in taking her own life. As the confused neighbors watch rather helplessly, the remaining sisters become isolated and unhinged, ending it all in a spectacular multiple suicide anticipated from the first page. Eugenides's engrossing writing style keeps one reading despite a creepy feeling that one shouldn't be enjoying it so much. A black, glittering novel that won't be to everyone's taste but must be tried by readers looking for something different. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 12/92. - Barbara Hoffert, "Library Journal" Copyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Features & Highlights

  • This beautiful and sad first novel, recently adapted for a major motion picture, tells of a band of teenage sleuths who piece together the story of a twenty-year old family tragedy begun by the youngest daughter’s spectacular demise by self-defenstration, which inaugurates “the year of the suicides.”

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
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(2.2K)
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★★
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(521)
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Most Helpful Reviews

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Chilling!

I read "The Virgin Suicides" over four years ago, and it still is by far the best book I have ever read. The book follows the doomed life of a family of sisters, as witnessed by the neiborhood boys. The author writes the chill into the air, making you read certain passages over again Much like passing a car wreck, you don't WANT to read it again, but you do. The story stays with you, as if it happened in your hometown, as if you knew the charecters. I have always said that this book would make a great movie, and I know now that it is in the early stages of production (although I do not know who is making it). The problem is this...very few movies live up to the books that created them, and I fear that this will be the same. No one can paint a correct picture on film. this story has a picture that is best left up to the reader to paint.
8 people found this helpful
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Boring .......

One of the worst books I have ever read. Chapter 1 ended it for me.
2 people found this helpful
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Incredible

Although I almost felt guilty for diving so far into this book, I loved it. After reading it almost two years ago, I have since re-read it numerous times. Eugenides is an incredible writer, this book must have taken years to put together. The topic is so intruiging, and, somehow, Eugenides makes death a beautiful, sometimes necessary thing. The book is musical, it's a guaranteed stay up all night and finish book, I can't wait for the movie to come out, when released in the U.K. it got dazzling reviews, it's supposed to be VERY true to the novel. I must also recommend the soundtrack (produced completely by the band AIR)
2 people found this helpful
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Haunts You a Bit in the End, but In a Good Kind of Way

Sometimes I am a bit late getting around to things. After seeing the movie when it first came out, I wanted to read THE VIRGIN SUICIDES. Yes, it has been that long. But I am glad I finally got around to it because the book is very good, both entertaining and emotionally captivating.

Written in the first person plural, ("We") THE VIRGIN SUICIDES is narrated by one (or some) of the boys who obsessed over the tragic Lisbon sisters all those years ago and whose lives have been shaped by their experiences and the sisters' collective self-destruction. This draws the readers in, as if he is part of the crowd, or at least someone with whom secrets are shared. We see the girls the way these boys did, as captivating yet distant, living riddles the answers to which no one seems to know. The reader can get lost in the book just hanging out with his buddies. Given the excellent prose that hits the spot time and time again, this is particularly easy to do.

Well, for the most part. One downside to the book is that, because we see the Lisbon sisters like the narrator does, we also do not see the sisters when they disappear into their isolation, imposed by their dysfunctionally overprotective parents. Much of the latter half of the book drags a bit too much when the girls are cloistered away after the crime of (one of them) failing to meet curfew.

Eugenides walks a fine line in capturing the individual personalities of the sisters while at the same time portraying them in such a way that characters in the book might view them as an indistinguishable herd. The youngest sister knocks herself off first and that experience, as awful experiences often do, sharpens distinctions between people so that we see the character underneath. This thread, seen from the narrative distance, allows for little and not so little distinctions to come across, unfolding just a bit at a time.

The lives of the narrator and his friends is also revealed, bit by bit, again against the backdrop of their inamorata. THE VIRGIN SUICIDES may have a dark premise, but it provides a very pleasing read.
1 people found this helpful
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Worthwhile Read

The Virgin Suicides provided a heartfelt look deep into the obsession with the 5 teenage girls, the Lisbon sisters. The book however, goes so much deeper than that. It looks at love, loneliness, obsession, lust, guilt, family and so much more. The book started off as a real page turner, however by about the mid way point is slowed down a bit and that chapters seemed to never end. Still it is a worthwhile read.
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Five stars

I like EVERYTHING that Jeffrey Eugenides writes.
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brilliant

5 stars. brilliant writing
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Love hurts. So does obsession. And adolesence.

It was a year unlike any other, in a small town that could be yours or mine. It had that idyllic Mayberry perfection; tree lined streets populated by friendly neighbors who knew everything there was to know about everyone else. It was also home to the five Lisbon girls. Then there were four. A year later, the Lisbon family was nothing but a memory, the town reeling from the suicides of the five girls, their parents disappearing in the night. Decades later, the boys who grew up on the same street are now men; men still infatuated with the mystery of those five untouchable girls.

This book is one of those that just reaches out and grabs you. I read it in two sittings over the course of two evenings. I still don't understand what it was about this novel that pulled me in so completely. Was it the girl's grief following their youngest sister's first attempt, followed weeks later by her successfully ending her life? Or was it their isolation, reinforced and strengthened over the course of that year? Perhaps it was the voyeurism of the boys as the watched, like peeping toms through windows, digging through the garbage, the drama that unfolded, only stepping forward to help when it was too late. Maybe it was the combination, which effects author Jeffrey Eugendies, wove together in a mesmerizing tale of helplessness, death, and obsession.

We are told the outcome of the story in the first sentence, "On the morning the last Lisbon daughter took her turn at suicide..." and yet it didn't detract from the novel at all. You would expect knowing the conclusion before the story even starts would be anti-climactic, but it wasn't. The story is in the whys, the mystery, the reasons, just as it is in any suicide. The death itself is only the beginning, so it seems only natural that the story should be told out of order, the end coming first.

Like Eugendies' other novel, Middlesex, The Virgin Suicides is listed as on the 1001 Books You Must Read Before You Die. I get it. It takes a unique story, one that given statistics and nightly news is sadly a problem that has become all too familiar, and tells it in a unique way. The narrative voice, given in the plural, noted by the use of the pronoun 'we' throughout the novel, is not one I've ever come across before. And while psychologists now know that depression, and even suicide, is often related to genetics, it's still not a story that has been told often. It's a story that needed to be told. Eugendies not only told the story, he told it well.

That said, I can see how this novel could not be for everyone. The boys come across almost as stalkers; the parents, Mrs. Lisbon especially, seem callous and uncaring - instead of getting help for their girls, they locked them away; the questions remain unanswered. For me that is part of the beauty of the novel, but in the wrong hands this narrative could have been a disaster. So I cannot wholeheartedly recommend this novel to everyone. The best I can say is try it out; read the first chapter. Within pages, you'll know.
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Haunting and Humorous. Creepy Nostalgia.

The Virgin Suicides is a book about little deaths: Innocence, childhood, first loves, and everything else we seem to lose through adolescence. Mr.Eugenides evokes laughter,sadness, and general bittersweet emotions through the observations of an obsessive/stalker-like teenage boy and the object(s) of his affections, the Lisbon Girls. A must read for people who enjoy creepy nostalgia!