Home Fire and Ethan Frome

Last week, I tagged along a couple days on my husband’s work conference to Banff, and then when I returned home I was in a tennis tournament over the weekend so it’s been busy. Being in Banff was really nice as usual, especially as it is still a bit of the quieter shoulder season there, though the ski season is just beginning and things are starting to pick up.

I took a few walks around town and along the river and went to one of my favorite spots — the Whyte Museum of the Canadian Rockies. It usually has an exhibit or two worth seeing.

This year it was Colleen Campbell’s art work of her 20 year career as a field biologist in Banff National Park tracking the patterns of bears along the eastern slopes of the Rockies. Her drawings detail the bears’ individuality and show the challenges they face in the increasingly high-traffic corridor of the park. Sadly many bears over the past decades have been hit and killed by cars on the highway or by trains, though park officials are trying hard to mitigate this. I kick myself for not getting a few shots of Campbell’s work while I was there, though some of it was quite detailed and might not have shown up too well using the iPhone camera. Still it was fascinating.

Since my last post, I finished Kamila Shamsie’s novel “Home Fire,” which was long-listed for this year’s Man Booker Prize Award, as well as Edith Wharton’s timeless 1911 classic “Ethan Frome.” Both lead up to endings that come to shattering reckonings. Shamsie’s novel is said to be a modern re-telling of Sophocles’ play “Antigone,” but it’s not something you really need to know about to follow her story. Only afterwards, did I look up “Antigone” to reacquaint my memory that it’s about a woman who attempts to secure a proper burial for her brother who is killed in battle. She has a sister too, who, unlike Antigone, hesitates to bury him out of obedience to the king’s authority.

Meanwhile, Shamie’s story is set in London and follows the lives of 19-year-old twins, Aneeka and her brother Parvaiz, who were raised by their older sister, Isma, the devout orphaned daughter of an Islamic jihadi fighter. It’s only when Isma leaves for a Ph.D program in the U.S., that things take a drastic turn. Parvaiz disappears to Syria to try to prove himself to the father he never knew, while his twin Aneeka becomes involved with the son of the British Home Secretary (a secularlized Muslim) to try to get help for her brother. But what starts as a relationship driven by motive soon develops into something much more.

Oh what a tangled web is weaved. What plays out between the two families from different neighborhoods — Isma’s and the Home Secretary’s — holds the story in the balance. Told from different characters’ perspectives, “Home Fire” deals with terrorism, religion, and politics in ways that are quite bold. I found it to be a timely and absorbing read that explores themes of love, loyalty, family, and justice. It caught me in its grip to the point that I listened to both the novel as an audiobook from the library, then when it expired too soon, I read it in hardback to pick up more of the details. I recommend both formats, though maybe even more so the audio as it’s superbly rendered and the hardback uses a font that seems unnecessarily tiny. Why do they do this to me?!

All in all, I’m thinking “Home Fire” is one of my favorite novels of the year. How it didn’t get shortlisted for the Booker Prize I don’t know. I thought it was better than Emily Fridlund’s novel “History of Wolves,” which made the Booker’s short list — or perhaps the subject matter of “Home Fire” just interested me more. It definitely surprised me because I had read Shamsie’s previous novel “A God in Every Stone” and found it a bit slow and cumbersome and a chore, but this one was lively and kept me turning the pages.

I didn’t find the story overtly pro-Muslim or anti-Muslim (the author is a Pakistani who was raised in Karachi and moved to London in 2007), but it showed people of various adherences of faith from the peaceful to the radical as well as to the secular … against the back drop of the dangerous and politicized times we live in. The roots of radicalism are explored in it as well as the pull of family — slightly similar to another novel I found thought-provoking — Karan Mahajan’s “The Association of Small Bombs.” “Home Fire” too has an ending that will send you scurrying for cover. A bit of a love story with a modern-day crisis about it, the novel’s themes carried the day for me.

Speaking of love story, I picked up a copy of Edith Wharton’s short novel “Ethan Frome” that was lying around my parents house when I visited them back in October. My folks had recently been in Massachusetts and had stopped by Wharton’s estate in Lennox, which is now a historic house museum. I gather my Dad was fond of the story from his school days and so bought a Signet Classic paperback Centennial Edition from the house museum. It’s the one that starts with a Foreword from author Anita Shreve who says “Ethan Frome” has “always been her favorite novel” and though she’s read it at least 20 times, she says the novel “never grows old or even fully known to me.”

And so with that, I plunged into the story set in a desolate winter landscape around the fictional farming town of Starkfield in western Massachusetts. Oh it’s a frigid place and time of year: cold, cold, cold! Brrr, the story makes you experience the freezing temps and the icy slopes as the protagonist Ethan wields his horse buggy along the rural snowbound roads. And from early on, you know something is not quite right with Ethan (now a man of 52); he’s had a “smash-up” of some sort that’s left him in a ruinous state along with his farm, where he lives with his shrew of a wife Zeena. But try as you must, you won’t find out what happened to him decades earlier until the episode plays back at the novel’s end.

It’s not a complex story. It’s about what happens when a young cousin of Ethan’s wife (Mattie Silver) comes to live with them on the farm. In due time, Ethan falls in love with Mattie but is trapped in his marriage to the awful, ailing Zeena, who moves to take from him the greatest chance at happiness he has left. Oh the story’s a heartbreaker whose shattering ending is far worse (I agree with Shreve in the Foreward) than we could have imagined.

It’s hard not to see it as semi-autobiographical — based on Wharton’s own dismal marriage that she was trapped in for 28 years to a mentally unstable man before she divorced him in 1913. Apparently she had an affair towards the end of her marriage to an American journalist that was brief but made her happy. It’s the story of Ethan Frome in reverse!

I tried to find the movie version of “Ethan Frome” from 1993 with Liam Neeson as the protagonist and Patricia Arquette as Mattie, but it wasn’t on Netflix or Apple TV. But too bad. Maybe it’s on YouTube. Guess who plays the sickly and cruel wife Zeena in the movie version? None other than the seemingly tough actress Joan Allen, who you might remember as CIA Director Pamela Landy in two of the Jason Bourne movies. Oh I fear she makes a harsh Zeena!

So thanks to my Dad for lending me a copy of his Signet edition of “Ethan Frome” and also to Brian over at the blog Babbling Books who reviewed Wharton’s short novel in October and urged me to read it. I indeed found it a classic worth visiting and Wharton a masterful author at the height of her powers.

What about you — have you read either of these novels or seen the movie — and if so, what did you think?

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20 Responses to Home Fire and Ethan Frome

  1. Carmen says:

    I fancy Home Fire; it seems well written and timely. I have Ethan Frome, along with The Age of Innocence, House of Mirth, and The Custom of the Country on my TBR. Maybe I’ll get to it in 2019 since I’m trying to incorporate more classics into my reading (my reading year 2018 is already planned). I haven’t watched the movie, but I knew Liam Neeson starred in it. Have you tried to find it in Google Play? You can watch it in your tablet or computer if they have it. Typically they have better variety than Netflix, though the latter offers better value for the money.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Yes Carmen, I think next year I hope to incorporate more classics into my reading as well. I would like to read Wharton’s other novels. I found this one easy and not dense reading. And thanks for telling me about Google Play, I think I will use this site more. It doesn’t seem they have the movie, but they have other stuff. It looks like a good option.

  2. Brian Joseph says:

    Thanks so much for the mention.

    Ethan Frome really was a great book. You raise a good point about the ice, snow and cold. The book exudes winter. This adds such an effective atmosphere to the book. I also recommend both The Age of Innocence and House of Mirth if you have not read them.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Brian, yeah that cold was quite effective in the book! It was quite coincidental that a copy of the book was lying around — right after you had talked about it. I enjoyed it and hope to read her other novels as well. I’m getting to be a Wharton fan, 🙂

  3. Ti says:

    The photos of Banff are so gorgeous. I heard it’s snowing in Mammoth so hopefully we will get the much-needed snow pack to ward off another summer of drought.

    Home Fire. I’ve seen it around but have never stopped long enough to read what it’s about. And you think it will be your fave book of the year?? I probably need to read it then.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Ti, I think we might have a big winter here, we will see. It’s supposed to snow tomorrow. Home Fire is on my list of favorites so far. I’m still trying to get to some notable ones before the year’s end. I liked Home Fire and thought it was timely and had a lot of emotions to it.

  4. Judy Krueger says:

    Wonderful reviews, Susan! I guess I need to read Home Fires sooner rather than later! You are the first person to make me want to read Ethan Frome. A little Edith Wharton goes a long way with me, but it could be time for me to revisit her. Funny to read your remarks about ice and snow when it just suddenly turned a bit warmer here.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Thanks Judy. I’d be interested to see what you think of Home Fire. As for Wharton, I think I want to read her others in 2018. I’m getting on her bandwagon. 🙂 This one is quite a depressing story! But quite vivid.

  5. Hi Susan, I can’t stop crushing on your pictures. I haven’t seen snow-capped mountains. So you can imagine. 🙂

    I am a bear-lover and it’s heartbreaking to know that bears lose their lives in road accidents. That’s sad. But I am glad that there is some terrific work on them. I wish I could see some photographs too. Thank you for telling us about the bears.

    ‘Ethan Frome’ has been in my list for a while. I am worried about how badly it would ruin my feelings. 🙂 But I must brace myself and read it soon.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Deepika, I too am heartbroken every time a bear is killed near here on the highway. There’s nothing worse. I fear Grizzlies will become wiped out in the park areas if we don’t do more. It’s so sad. There’s just too many people & too many cars & trains for the bears to navigate thru. As for Ethan Frome, it is a heartbreaker, a short and easy read, very visual in its winter landscape. Brace yourself.

  6. Love the sound of Home Fire. I think I may have read Ethan Frome many years ago; so long ago that it is probably due for a reread.

    I remember visiting Banff many years ago…in the 60s. Thanks for sharing.

    Enjoy your week, and thanks for visiting my blog.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Laurel: I think you would like both Home Fire & Ethan Frome. Good stories with big endings. Banff must have been really neat in the ’60s — a much quieter time there I’m sure. It’s quite built up nowadays, but in the offseason it’s still fun to visit.

  7. I remember liking Ethan Frome, but that was years ago, and as I remember almost nothing about it, I feel I need to re-read it!

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Amy, yeah Ethan Frome is a quick read, short (not David Copperfield!). I hadn’t read it before but Wharton is a master so I will read more of hers. I need to mix more classics in. Enjoy your week.

  8. JaneGS says:

    I reread Ethan Frome a few years ago, and agree with you regarding the semi-autobiographical nature of it. While Edith Wharton seems light years from Ethan Frome, their views of marriage as prison coalesce. That said, it’s hard to imagine anyone listing it as a favorite novel!

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Jane, yeah it’s a bleak book for sure! The ending wasn’t what I expected it would be. I’m interested to read her other novels to see how marriage plays out in them. I saw the movie The Age of Innocence but it’s a long while and I need to refresh my memory of it.

  9. Brona says:

    Home Fire – yes, yes, yes. If the Booker was still for Commonwealth writers only, I feel strongly that she would have won. she deserves to win something for this incredible story.

    I read Ethan Frome too long ago to remember much about it all – must be time for a reread.

    • Susan Wright says:

      Hi Brona, so glad you liked Home Fire! I’ve been trying to find someone else who’s read it. I will check your site to find out what you said about it. It felt quite real to me and a tragic story that I got caught up in. Thx for stopping by.

  10. Iza says:

    I still think Ethan Frome is awfully depressing, lol, but I also still think Wharton writes beautifully and what you’re telling me about her life (I know nothing of it) interests me, I need a biography. I wanted to rewatch the film too and found it on YT cut in small parts, the first is here : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-cbMLeLfxXM

    • Susan says:

      Hi Iza, yeah I could use a biography of Wharton as well. You are right it’s surely a depressing novel, LOL … every aspect of it goes right down down down. Thanks for the link to the movie – I’m a little worried to watch that final sled scene but I’m curious to see how & where they filmed the whole film … it felt so cold!! I have yet to read Wharton’s other novels, but I still hope to do. Cheers.

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