Vladimir: A Novel
R**M
Insightful Ramblings
I really enjoyed this plot but there was so much rambling going on. Some I found interesting, others I just wanted to zoom by. Great palette cleanser.
C**R
effects of booze and sexual improprieties on literary authors and professors
this first person confessional, saturated with references of literature by women authors, comes with a post-gothic tone of edgar allen poe. the reader is introduced in the early pages to vladimir, for whom this document is written—whether vladimir will ever see the text is left to the reader to decide. vladimir is bound with zip ties, chained to a chair in a cabin. that introduction made, the narrator unfolds her story, of a woman in her fifties, perceived by herself no longer physically attractive, a university professor of literature, two published books of some promise during her younger days, nothing followed. married, she and her husband, also a writer and literary professor, had an open marriage—his permission to engage in sexual activities with other women, mostly his students. seven of his students accuse him of taking advantage of them sexually.contemplating the power dynamics of sexual behavior, reciprocity can become moot, the tacit contract of mutual agreement can be rescinded by the person with the least power or lacking in power at any moment, youth, employee, student disclosure within certain institutions and situations is a matter of impropriety. this is the situation in which the husband of the narrator is in, legal counsel hired and the advice of his daughter and her lover, both young women lawyers.the self-absorbed narrator, accused of being her husband’s enabler, like most fabled workers in the fields of literature is a heavy drinker, caught up in the anxiety of her own fading opportunities of sexual encounters, being less desirable and attractive than the young women on campus and her husband, sets her sites on the new young sexy professor, author of an acclaimed, first novel. vladimir, like the narrator, is married and the parent of a daughter. from a conversation with vladimir’s wife and her perceptions, more false than true, of other events, the narrator is emboldened to go ahead with her plan to seduce vladimir by kidnapping.in an interview, julia may jonas, a playwright, said that her novel started out as a play that, during the height of the covid pandemic, she turned into a novel. the pages of the book set in the cabin read like stage scenes, the narrator and vladimir in action and conversation wrestled with the attempt to upset role reversals within the power dynamics of sexual behavior, questioning female sexual desire as contrasted with male sexual desire, coming up with female power losing. rather disturbingly, jonas perceives women at whatever age as messy and lacking sexual agency. no wonder the need for gothic trappings.
M**G
Engaging
I wasn't sure what was coming next. Somewhat zany and funny. I recognized many of my colleagues in the one personage.
P**E
Not what I expected based on the cheesy cover!
I read an essay on this book on Lit Hub, or I'd never have picked it up because of that silly cover. In an acerbic, witty, and intelligent voice, an academic woman discusses her obsession with a coworker, the unraveling of her career thanks to her husband's pursuit of his students, and her dawning realization that things have irrevocably changed in the world of academia. Her wry observations have readers of a certain age chuckling and laughing along, but in one swift passage, she sets her own argument against today's students on its ear. It's a breathtaking trick that took my breath away. Truly a fantastic read about watching the world around you change as you age, with mordant humor and some amazing food descriptions (which generally bore me). And yes, the opening scene will scare the crap out of you, but read it anyway.
K**N
Summer read, maybe
The first 30% is well-written in crisp, clear sentences. The author does not follow the new way of writing—many adjectival and adverbial phrases, separated by commas; such sentences used to be called either run-on or unnecessary. Then the plot is stretched, twisted and turned in a purposeless way. Vladimir enters and allows the author to fill enough pages for this book to be regarded as a novel. If this were a play, Vladimir might have been allowed one scene. The author is a playwright who tried to write fiction during the pandemic. Not much occurs but all is timely in order to sell. The woman is happy as I her job as a professor, and her husband is chairman. He has done the evil deed of having affairs with his students. For today’s world the daughter is a lesbian in a monogamous relationship that has problems. The parents have an open marriage. The questions are: what will the department decide is a proper punishment and how will the couple handle their marriage. The conclusion is the best part. However, a lot of wasted space occurs before the early part of the novel and the end. The author should continue writing plays. This pandemic trial was a failure.
D**N
The Inner Workings of a Woman's Mind
'Vladimir' is a provocative and compulsive read that follows the sometimes ludicrous, sometimes profound inner workings of a fifty-eight-year old woman's mind as she transitions from one part of her life to another while managing steadfast and mercurial identities.I loved it and will read key parts of it again whenever I need that encouraging sense of someone else's understanding.
A**R
Written very well, hated the plot and development
There is no one as boring as people deep in English departments of any university; the self-absorbed superiority is as dull as it is off putting. There was little to like about the characters. The narrator character overthought everything in uninteresting ways. She was so self-despising it was painful to read. The premise sounded so interesting that I dared read a new contemporary novelist, all of whom I usually avoid because I see their “writing” tracks in their shocking and supposedly imaginative but trite plot ideas. This one is equally trite with the slap the reader in the face plot twists. I don’t find it entertaining.The author has an amazing aptitude with the English language and should write again with characters who get sprinkled with loving depth and realistic goals. There is no reason to lose your readers’ trust with tricks of plot. Build your story to the end with no childish disasters and abrupt change of personalities.
M**E
Reminds me a little of the movie Shampoo with a backing track of Hallelujah
Having read a few excerpts from the fiction of Bret Easton Ellis, and viewing several YouTube book dicussions, this novel's name kept cropping up. Each time I heard it, I couldn't get the name of somebody rather contentious out of my head. When Amazon offered the eBook on a deal, I decided to go for it. I romped through the first half, fascinated by the life of a US PhD tutor in English, two novels under her belt, and still interacting with her lit students. At least one reviewer preferred this novel over BEE's Shards (which I have yet to read). There was also a warning that the contents are controversial. I like my fiction edgy, yet am aware that writers have to be so careful these days, so with writing, it's kind of like walking on a highwire, trying to get the balance right without ruining the whole show.I almost awarded the book five stars, it just missed the full marks because I detected some padding in the middle with the recipes and wine guzzling. Moving the feast aside, I did so want to know what the protagonist was going to do with you-know-who, and what the outcome would be. I didn't really care too much about the husband, and by the second half of the book, I just wished he would leave the room and never come back.
R**R
3.5 stars
The opening scene -with Vladimir bound and restrained by the protagonist was exciting, well written and intriguing. Unfortunately, the story ran out of steam along the way, with repeated and excessive descriptions of, well, anything really, a lot of extraneous detail and mixed messages.The core setting and premise were excellent. The setting - a New England college campus awash with cultural politics - and the premise - a professor in her late 50s, mourning her youth while trying to reconcile her diminishing sexual appeal with her rampant sexual appetite (evidenced by the fact she masturbates a lot). It is this conundrum that stokes her desire for Vladimir, a handsome young colleague whom she lusts after to the point of obsession. I won't bore you with all the details, but eventually she sort of kidnaps and drugs him, chaining him to a chair and then going to bed on her own. The plot - in as much as there is one - becomes faintly ridiculous here. She wants him, she doesn't want him, she wants him......etc It's difficult to write more without spoilers, but suffice to say, unlike their eventual coupling, the denouement was not at all satisfying.At this point campus cultural politics rears its head again. Basically, the professor's husband is being forced to resign because of historic affairs with students. His wife's view is that since everything was consensual there is no case to answer (they had an open marriage and she had her affairs too). I liked her internal monologue about how, in the MeToo era, women are encouraged to recast their experiences through the lens of victimhood. She makes a clear distinction between, on the one hand, coercion, sexual abuse and rape, and on the other, relationships freely entered into and enjoyed. In this regard she feels her husband is being treated very unfairly - tried for previous crimes within the current fevered milieu - and that she, by association, is tainted. Indeed, her female students gang up on her, demanding to know why she isn't divorcing him. It makes her seem weak, they claim. Privately it is them who are weak, she believes, for failing to understand how the world works, how relationships work, and for seeing sex between unequal partners as inherently and inevitably abusive. Being of a different generation, she has a much more straightforward view, namely, men are drawn to beautiful women and women are drawn to powerful men. I felt the author made this case well, so when, at the very end of the book, it was upended and the professor is forced to see that her husband was a predator after all (at least I think that was the message - it was all a bit confusing by that point) it jarred somewhat. As did the glaring double standard. The older, higher status female professor was not called to account in any way (again, a bit confusing, but I think that's right) for the kidnapping, chaining, drugging and sex with her younger colleague. Is that message that women can do what they want but men better watch out? I was confused.In summary, this is a complicated book - a bit of a curates egg. Interesting and boring, insightful and cliched, clear and confusing. For that reason it would make a good book club choice as there is much to discuss.
A**R
You can't judge a book by its cover.
Body image, beauty, ageing, me too, generational gaps, the complexity of relationships, parenting, the creative mind and spirit, professional jealousy, substance abuse, sexual desire, fantasising, and more. A very full read that is expertly written and offers much more than the cover suggests. Great for your next book club.
J**4
Nuanced analysis of “me too”
Views on the “me too” movement are very polarised. This novel is an intelligent take on the issue which doesn’t cop out by taking a middle way but looks at the issue from a number of potentially valid perspectives. It’s also about ageing, narcissism and managing the final embers of a successful career. It also bizarrely lurches into psychological thriller territory. It’s a very enjoyable read and incredibly thought provoking.
A**N
Like the plot and themes
Plot was interesting and I liked the themes it raised but the flow didn't work for me. It felt slow, with lots of description and little action and then massive life changing things happened for the characters in a few paragraphs.
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