Monday, January 7, 2019

Purity

by Jonathan Franzen
563 pgs

Purity, the most recent novel by Jonathan Franzen, at its core, is the story of Purity Tyler and her search for her identity and place in the world. Purity goes by Pip and is a young college graduate living in Oakland, California. She lives rent free in a house shared by multiple roommates, including a married man she's obsessed with. She works for a telemarketing company, where she struggles to earn enough to make the payments on the $130,000 in student loans she's carrying.

Growing up, Pip was raised by her mother, Penelope, in a small remote cabin somewhere in the Santa Cruz Mountains. Her mother is an emotionally unstable woman, who hid Pip's existence from her father. Pip knows that Penelope is not her mother's real name, but her mother refuses to tell her who she used to be, and the identity of her father.

Andreas Wolf grew up in East Germany. He has led a privileged, but deviant life. He has some serious skeletons in his closet, including the killing of the father of a teenage girl he was in love with when he was 27. He's now the founder of an organization called The Sunshine Project, which is a competitor to WikiLeaks and is headquartered in Bolivia.

One evening, a woman named Annagret stops by the house Pip lives in to visit one of her roommates. Annagret is involved with The Sunshine Project and is so impressed with Pip that she encourages her to come to Bolivia to work for them. She informs Pip that Andreas Wolf could probably help her track down the identity of her father, so Pip agrees and takes the job.

The book moves around a lot from this point, as Franzen weaves together the lives of Pip, Andreas Wolf, and those of her parents. Things which at first seem coincidental, are quickly revealed not to be, and the crimes of Wolf's past have, and will continue to play a pivotal role in Pip's life.

Franzen is a great storyteller. This is only the second book by him that I've read, and while I didn't enjoy it as much as I did Freedom, I still consider it a pretty good book. Pip wasn't the most likeable character for me, but fortunately she exists the narrative for significant stretches of time throughout the book, and by the end, she'd redeemed herself enough to leave me satisfied with the book as a whole.

★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆

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