the twenty-second casualty
I’ve been reading this beautiful, poignant novella for quite some time, and actually stalling on it because I didn’t want to finish it – this is very rare. It chronicles the lives of several Americans of French origin who live in the South. The main protagonist is a woman called Edna who is extremely unhappy about her place in society as mother and wife. She longs for something more and actually breaks from societal confines in order to explore what constitutes personal happiness.
I imagine that the subject matter would have been pretty shocking for its time, whereas now it’s just a very painful reminder of how inflexible the woman’s role in society was a hundred or so years ago. As a closet Marxist, I do have to point out that the book has a distinctly realist setting, that is, we’re talking about Western middle-class society. So, realism does not equal ‘realistic’ depictions or settings of life – if you want that, you need to seek out naturalist works (which I generally much prefer).
This work is very popular in university literature courses, specifically modernist ones for good reason. If you enjoy reading Woolf, you will very likely derive much enjoyment from this work.

