Middlesex Book Reviews

AUTHOR
Jeffrey Eugenides
SCORE
4.5
TOTAL RATINGS
1,274

Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides Book Summary

Middlesex is the winner of the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction.

A dazzling triumph from the bestselling author of The Virgin Suicides--the astonishing tale of a gene that passes down through three generations of a Greek-American family and flowers in the body of a teenage girl.

"I was born twice: first, as a baby girl, on a remarkably smogless Detroit day of January 1960; and then again, as a teenage boy, in an emergency room near Petoskey, Michigan, in August of l974. . . My birth certificate lists my name as Calliope Helen Stephanides. My most recent driver's license...records my first name simply as Cal."

So begins the breathtaking story of Calliope Stephanides and three generations of the Greek-American Stephanides family who travel from a tiny village overlooking Mount Olympus in Asia Minor to Prohibition-era Detroit, witnessing its glory days as the Motor City, and the race riots of l967, before they move out to the tree-lined streets of suburban Grosse Pointe, Michigan. To understand why Calliope is not like other girls, she has to uncover a guilty family secret and the astonishing genetic history that turns Callie into Cal, one of the most audacious and wondrous narrators in contemporary fiction. Lyrical and thrilling, Jeffrey Eugenides's Middlesex is an exhilarating reinvention of the American epic.

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Book Name Middlesex
Genre Literary
Published
Language English
E-Book Size 1.58 MB

Middlesex (Jeffrey Eugenides) Book Reviews 2024

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Very imaginative and top notch writing. This novel is one I won't soon forget. His characters are fully developed and written with such compassion, I felt as if I knew them! What a unique story.....written in a way to keep the reader interested all the way through. I loved it.

Mediocre. The premise is cool and fresh, but the execution is lacking in "umph". I was really into the book all the way up until the 2/3rds point. The last 1/3 fell flat and got uninteresting for me. Needless to say, the ending left alot to be desired. Overall I would not recommend this book, but if you are interested in this go for it but do not go in with high expectations.

More than you would expect!. Fantastic read from the first page. While I thought it would be a biology book without much of a plot, I was so pleasantly surprised! What an amazing story where the reader is taken back in time and then brought to the present. The author's way with words is poetic. You will love this book and fall in love with its characters.

Hard to finish.... The author is too descriptive...o we really need your description of the fog rolling in, in San Francisco? I mean get to the point, it's long overdue at this point anyway. Why did we have to have back & forth with "the man" as he is now, pointless. Just tell Calliopa's story and leave it with her watching the house. Cut out all the jumping back & forth between current and then, this will lose about 150 pages and you've got a much better novel. Loved the family history and stories. As a Detroiter, I loved those descriptions as well. Not a bad read, but could have been better.

Deserving of the Pulitzer. Written by the author of The Virgin Suices, this book won the Pulitzer Prize in 2003. As with most contemporary and literary fiction, the time frame jumps around, the point of views shifts, and the subject matter is deep. However, in this case, I found many of these literary devices seemless and intimately tied to the narrative and meaning of the story. Calliope is the narrator of the story, and she begins by telling us that she was “born twice”—first as a baby girl, and then as a teenage boy. As the story unfolds, we learn the reason for this: she was a hermaphrodite. Much of the first half of the novel is spent in the past, narrating gone lives of her Greek grandparents, noting their lives but also the fluke of genetics that would lead to her/his biological anomaly—the marriage of this brother and sister as they fled Greece and the Turkish attack on Smyrna. Through their lives we read of their time in Detroit during Prohibition, the lives of their children, and their lives in Detroit during the Race Riots—eventually leading to the birth of Callie. Of course, much of this has nothing to do with Calliopse’s condition, it is an interesting and historical look into those cultures and the lives of the fictional people within them. In between, we are treated to brief snippets of the male Callie’s life, just moments here and there of the difficulties of navigating life as a male after growing up as a female. But the latter part of the book turns to Callie’s life as a child and then an adolescent. Much of her life is the stuff of growing up: learning to relate with friends, parents, and others; the awkwardness and exploration of puberty and teenage years. Of course, Calliope’s coming-of-age story is different because of her condition, unknown to her and her parents until she reached the age of 15 and it became clear something was wrong. The rest of the story pours forth: doctors, family strife, fear, denial and acceptance, and an exploration of what it means to be a male after having been raised a female. I won’t spoil the book by going further. The books covers eight decades of a family line, delves into gender confusion, sexual desires, and the search for one’s place in the world. While gender fluidity and transgender are hot topics of discussion today, Eugenides avoids any social or political commentary, and merely tells the story of a genetic anomaly (perhaps some might read the few references to “a new humanity” as commentary). Instead, the story invites us to think about a imperfect world, which includes an imperfect biology. It asks us to think about what it means to be “different,” especially when different is a rarity. It is an imaginative book, pulling from Greek history, mythology, genetic science, and American history. The style is quite readable and avoids the often confusing experimention of much contemporary literary novels. Stunning, perhaps, is the ability of Eugenides to write as a first-person female and seeming to do it with ease (though I should perhaps leave that to female readers). Parts of it may make some readers feel prurient, and some might think the graphic descriptions are unnecessary. One could argue those sections are necessary because of the subject of the book, and that Eugenides keeps to fairly clinical descriptions, but it might make some readers uncomfortable. It is easy to see why this book won the Pulitzer Prize. If you are ready for the scope, length, and subject matter of the book, you will probably enjoy it.

A great book.. Yes.

Incredible. This book is extremely engrossing. The story is incredibly interesting and the characters are vivid. I liked it more than his previous novel "The Virgin Suicides," which is also extremely good.

Middlesex. Great book, loved the characters. Very human and despite the taboo relationships, very likable. Great story.

Great read. Wow what a great read from beginning to end. I learned so much about Greek history as well as American History but most important human nature. I wanted to learn more instantly. Why? Because it's probably more common than we know.

Life never turns out to be what you expected.. I loved this book, couldn't put it down. A few reviews I have read, the reader hated it, never finished it. That is probably because they thought it was "weird". Well, it's not "weird", it's just life. We don't all experience the same things. We do, however, all have secrets and heartaches.

Make This Novel into a Limited Series on a streaming service!!!. The first time I read this novel was when it first came out in 2002. Reading it a second time was better than the first. Great storytelling. Wonderful characters. I was born in Detroit so everything referenced about that city brought back distant memories of how it was once a major contributor to the US economy. Street names. Landmarks. 1967 riots. Cadillacs. I also traveled to Greece last summer so that too heightened my interest learning about what happened to make Desdemona and brother/husband move to the US. I would so love to see Middlesex made into a limited series on some streaming service. If done well it would certainly be a hit.

Middlesex. Eugenides. Crystallizes the depth and uniqueness of ethnic continuity.i suspect that one need not be Greek to appreciate the varied roles , perspectives and the sustenance family offers, and how it is juxtaposed with the inherent jealousies ,and predictable absurdities that exist with every extended family. But what is truly remarkable is the central concept of the genetic anomaly that occurs here and how remarkably Cal handles this with wisdom, ultimately, and possibly poetically absolving Desdemona of her primary guilt, clearing her way to .......go.

Exceptional.. And irreverent and I adore the style,language, hutzpah of our Author. Bravo for works at large

Eye opening. I read this book for an English class and loved it. The first pages were a little slow but I was immediately hooked after.

100 Words or Less. This was a case of heightened expectations crashing into the blah reality. I loved “Virgin Suicides.” So, I ripped into this new novel with relish. Wow, was I disappointed. I adore Eugenides’ writing, even in this novel; however, I was bored by the plot and characters. I slogged through the first 100+ pages, trying to wade past the grandparents’ history, hoping that it would pick up. Nope. With each page my interest peeled away. This was so disappointing. Reluctantly I finally decided to give up.

Perfection. Simply a full journey into what narrative story telling is all about. Humor, plot, character, and theme took me away away.

Middlesex. Such a detailed and well woven story.

Incredible descriptions, but a long read. I am not as much a fan of this as many of the other reviewers. I thought that the lengthy descriptions and the narrative voice distracted from the arc of the story, alhough I loved the historic details and the life lessons that were woven throughout. I had to make myself finish the book as part of my quest to read every Pulitzer Prize fiction winner otherwise, I’d likely have stopped before the end. The author’s voice, character names, vivid details, and brilliant turns of phrases stick with the reader even when other bits fade.

A beautiful book. Historical, hysterical, it made me laugh, it made me cry. I cried so much, sometimes even when it was not sad, I felt like a toothless old lady. A book about liberation and self discovery but removededly enough to only inspire subconsciously to go out there and... Well, just be yourself and live your life.

Middle sex. Well written. It gives a better understanding on the condition and how this condition affects the person and every aspect of that persons life and family. I enjoyed it tremendously.

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Summary of Middlesex by Jeffrey Eugenides

The Middlesex book written by Jeffrey Eugenides was published on 04 September 2002, Wednesday in the Literary category. A total of 1,274 readers of the book gave the book 4.5 points out of 5.

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