Troy Terwilliger’s Reviews > Revolutionary Road > Status Update
Troy Terwilliger
is 45% done
It is a fascinating shift in the "American Dream." While Frank and April Wheeler in the 1950s felt they had to choose between their personal identities and their roles as parents, many young Americans in 2026 are simply refusing to make that sacrifice.
— Mar 17, 2026 02:11PM
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Troy’s Previous Updates
Troy Terwilliger
is 88% done
So many good fights in this book. “She was leaving him.”
— Mar 19, 2026 04:09AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 73% done
Oh, the sheer, predictable banality of Frank Wheeler.
Just as the "Paris Plan" dies and April withdraws into a ghostly, silent version of herself, Frank doesn’t respond with empathy or reflection. Instead, he seeks out narcissistic supply from Maureen Grube, the secretary at Knox who thinks he’s brilliant simply because he can put a few sentences together.
— Mar 19, 2026 02:57AM
Just as the "Paris Plan" dies and April withdraws into a ghostly, silent version of herself, Frank doesn’t respond with empathy or reflection. Instead, he seeks out narcissistic supply from Maureen Grube, the secretary at Knox who thinks he’s brilliant simply because he can put a few sentences together.
Troy Terwilliger
is 68% done
April’s lack of forgiveness is the most honest thing in the book. She realizes that Frank’s "love" is conditional—he loves the April who makes him feel like a hero, but he hates the April who demands he actually be one.
— Mar 19, 2026 02:39AM
Troy Terwilliger
is 67% done
Betrayal of the Shared Self—April has lost her partner in crime. Frank has used the baby as a way to chicken out on their plan to go to Paris. She didn’t want to go without him. Now she doesn’t forgive him and doesn’t want to live with him.
— Mar 19, 2026 02:37AM

