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The Married Man

by Edmund White


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  • Edmund White's seventh novel begins as a gossipy comedy of manners, then carries the reader over the edge of a terrible abyss. In this masterfully written story, Austin, a forty-something American furniture scholar, meets Julien, a young married Frenchman, at the gym. Austin is intrigued not only by Julien's looks and his interest in him, but in the young man's mysterious past. Julien hints at his noble origins and sketches a minimal portrait of his marriage to a woman he met while studying architecture in Addis Ababa.

    Julien's past is never really made explicit, though, and Austin just chalks it up to European mores. Throughout the novel, White plays on Jamesian themes of culture clash, highlighting the tension between Austin's fixed ideas about sexual identity and Julien's more fluid ones. Eventually, Julien divorces his wife and he and Austin share a life of swank parties and expensive vacations. But in the second half of the novel, things start to unravel when Julien is diagnosed with AIDS.

    In a vain attempt to outrun mortality, Austin and Julien travel in ever-widening circles: New England, Montreal, Key West, Venice. Austin cares for Julien as best he can, but Julien is a difficult and temperamental lover, and his illness is a great challenge to Austin. Worn down, his body revolting against itself, Julien musters his last words to Austin as his lover tries to clean him. "Je te deteste," he says. I hate you.

    White's novels always appear easy. In The Married Man, the pages bristle with powerful and compassionate language that conjures up the illusion of comfort. Before long, though, the reader is enmeshed in a complex emotional fabric. The Married Man is a suspenseful and engaging fiction, packed with important moral ideas. One leaves this beautiful and terrifying love story much as its American protagonist does: exhausted, alive, and maybe even a little enlightened.

    -- Lawrence Chua

     
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