Good news, my friends! Joyce Maynard has published a new novel, and it’s her best one yet. If you’re new around here, enter the words “Joyce Maynard” into the search box to find out all of the hilarious things I had to say about this writer in the past. To cut a very long story short, I think she’s gifted, but unfortunately she went woke several years ago and started publishing unhinged anti-Trumpian rants instead of novels.
In an excellent turn of events, though, Maynard found a way to break out of her sad ideological capture. She set her new novel titled In Wonderland in 1986, back when Maynard was much younger, had very conservative sensibilities, and was into babies, homemaking, and family life. Her gift immediately came back once she started writing about things she cares about and understands instead of politics which confuses her.
In Wonderland is a Bildungsroman. We all know that I avoid them because I’ve read way too many novels in this genre and can’t take them anymore, but Maynard’s coming-of-age novel is actually pretty great. The plot is great, even though it’s not particularly fresh. A fourteen-year-old girl from a dysfunctional, poor family comes to spend the summer with the family of rich acquaintances who are also dysfunctional but in a different way. The story is never boring, the characters are layered and convincing, and there is an important lesson in the novel. Teenagers need attentive, involved parents who remember that they are still children and do not try to treat them like friend substitutes. They also need some sort of an interest, a job, a sport, a very energy-consuming hobby to occupy them, or they’re going to get into utterly unnecessary trouble. The novel is set in 1986, but today it’s worse because trouble awaits a teenager on every device. Obviously, teenagers don’t need their parents to hover. But they most certainly do not need to be left completely to their own devices, especially on devices.
I’m making this novel sound preachy and boring, but I promise it’s not. It’s lots of fun to read. And it’s free on Kindle Unlimited. Descriptions of the summer of 1986 at a beach lake country house in Maine are so vivid that reading feels like going on vacation there. There are family mysteries, infidelity, dysfunction, and less than 0.04% of wokeness in the novel.
A perfect vacation read, highly recommended.