Ever read a book that you almost felt like you didn't have a right to criticize?
This book made me feel that way, and that is why I have put off writing a review. However, I told my teacher that I would eventually do it. I was required to pick a book out to read for my last week of high school in my Advanced Literature class that had some type of connection to my family. So, I chose this book. My family is quite familiar with this book's topic. I'm blessed in that I am not personally affiliated but I wanted to understand more about what some of the people who i love most have wen't through.
Just a little synopsis, this book is about a woman, Fran, who is in a relationship that is full of domestic violence at the hands of her NYPD husband, Bobby. However, its not just her who is being affected physically and mentally but her little son who is constantly hearing the abuse and the excuses that Fran says such as...Mommy had an accident. She decided to run and enters into what I consider to be some type of a batter woman's underground railroad.
Okay, so I believe that books that center around such a serious topic such as domestic violence, they have two duties.
1. You have to keep it real, because you are telling the story of not just the possibly fictional heroine but of every woman who has encountered this situation and picks up your book.
2.You have got to make the people who have never encountered domestic violence understand as much as possible. You got to reach deep within in them and make them cringe, you have to educate them. Through education comes liberation.
This book might have succeeded on goal 1, but for me it didn't succeed on goal 2. Might sound crazy, but this book wasn't sick enough for me. The beginning was pretty scary in that I was tense and was afraid for the heroine and her child. However, id say the next 80 percent of the book was just Fran and her Son in a new place and adjusting, making friends, and living. That was disappointing to me. With a title like Black and Blue, I expected to read about some horrid things in detail. I expected to cringe. You see, while Fran was living her "new life" it was obvious that her husband Bobby was looking every where for her. He was tormenting her family, and using all his cop connections. However, that little fact was not kept in the forefront of this book. Instead, we read about soccer practices and field trips and selling avon products. It would have been really cool if the book switched perspectives from Fran, to Bobby, to maybe even her Son. I just thought that as a journalist it would have been way more controversial, uncomfortable, and scary! Plus, Fran had a way of infuriating me. You see her decisions were reallllllly freaking stupid. It lead to her demise. I truly believe that you never know how strong you are until strong is the only choice you have. Fran needed to be strong and in some ways she was and in many ways she wasn't. It really angered me because I wanted her to get away, be safe, same for her son. However, it was pretty obvious as the story progressed that her decisions were gonna really come back to get her. However, I am not a battered woman and I cannot judge her to harshly because I know not. One thing I do know however, is that the battered women group that was helping her was not depicted right. These groups help woman, they give them support, they uplift them, they help them realize their power in this world. However, the one helping Fran was demeaning, power stripping, and overbearing...just like her husband was. Anyways, all that being said it is still a good book.
The strength of this book is in two things.
1. Quindlen has very lyrical writing. Her writing is so smooth and clear.
2. The perspective. Everything is from Fran's point of view. While, I didn't want it to be that way. It is still very cool. Fran is a abused and has had nobody to unburden her heart to. She had no therapy and therefore, what some people may not know is that you are reading the world through the eyes of a unfiltered battered woman. her thought process was so screwy and wrong in so many ways. However, this is quite possibly how an abused person thinks. It was eye opening in that
regard.
I believe this is a great book for someone who is young and has never read about domestic violence, someone who wants to read about it but not read something earth shattering and depressing beyond belief, and as a book club read with lots of discussion.