Book details
The Virgin Suicides
by Jeffrey Eugenides
1993
About the book
Set in a 1970s Detroit suburb, the novel follows the five Lisbon sisters—Cecilia, Lux, Bonnie, Mary, and Therese—who all commit suicide within a single year. Their story is narrated by a collective "we," a group of neighborhood boys who observe the family from afar, piecing together the tragedy through scraps of journals, photographs, and shared memories. As the girls’ parents impose a suffocating, pious isolation on the household, the narrators document the local community's decline, the girls' brief romances, and the physical decay of the suburban landscape.
Readers interested in the intersection of suburban sociology and adolescent psychology choose this book for its clinical focus on memory and obsession. It appeals to those who study how communities mythologize local tragedies and how the male gaze shapes the perception of young women. The audience gains an understanding of the tension between rigid domestic expectations and the reality of mental health struggles. By the end, the reader retains a detailed inventory of a lost era and the realization that some interior lives remain fundamentally unknowable to outside observers.
Details
- Published
- 1993
- Language
- EN