Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Can you explain the scene of when Abigail in The Lovely Bones cheats on her husband?

One of the fascinating aspects of this novel is the way in
which it presents us with a whole gamut of different reactions to death. Whilst Jack
becomes obsessed with finding his daughter's murderer, Abigail, his wife, seems to just
want to do what she can to move on with her life. Part of this, as narrated to us by
Susie, is the affair that she has with Len, as she feels increasingly distanced from her
husband because of their different reactions to their daughter's disappearance and
death.


It is in Chapter Twelve where the affair occurs,
and, according to Susie, when Abigail asks Len to kiss her it is a "beg for
leniency:



My
mother was moving physically through time to flee from me. I could  not hold her back...
I knew what was happening. Her rage, her loss, her despair. The whole life lost tymbling
out in an arc on that roof, clogging up her being. She needed Len to drive the dead
daughter out.



Thus the affair
that Abigail has with Len is about her need to move on, to "drive the dead daughter out"
and to find "new life" on the other side of her kiss with him. She cannot dwell
permanently on what has been lost and her desire to move on is expressed in her
affair.

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