Sunday, March 30, 2014

Hidden by Catherine McKenzie 4.5/5 Stars


Similar to Karen Smith, from Mean Girls, I have this very special psychic ability to tell when a movie is going to either show on television or come up in conversation. I have had this ability since I was a child where I will think of some arbitrary film that I’ve seen and then within the next day or two it is on television. Forget trying to understand this phenomenon, that’s pointless. I just call it happy circumstance. 

Recently, the movie Intersection (1994) came to mind, I am still not sure why. I just thought of Richard Gere playing the infidel and Lolita Davidovich and Sharon Stone standing at the site of the car accident both with these knowing smirks that in the end he chose her. After my capricious thought passed I knew, at some point this movie would come around. Well in this case, the movie never came about but a book did, Hidden by Catherine McKenzie. This is the story of Jeff Manning who dies after being struck by a car leaving behind his wife and son. However, Tish Underhill is a co-worker that feels this loss rather strongly as well, which leads to the question of whether or not Jeff was having an affair with Tish. Unlike in the movie, Intersection where the viewers know the main character was having an affair, in this novel the reader proceeds throughout the story with innuendo that maybe something did happen between Jeff and Tish or what could have been.

I was rather excited about reading this book largely because I only read adult fiction about once a month. The writing is very artfully crafted, spanning three perspectives in narrative: Jeff, his wife, Claire, and Tish. The author intersperses these metaphors and allusions throughout the novel that showcase her talent and intelligence. At one point, Claire refers to Tish as the “dastardly Mr. Wickham.” She writes her characters with insecurities based around their families, whether it is a child, father, husband, or sibling. Even the secondary characters reveal these self-doubts which then fosters the movement of the plot. Without giving too much away, the story centers around the doubt and guilt each of the three narrators feel from past transgressions and how these doubts spur their actions and reactions to the events in the book.

Hidden is a gem of a read. I know I’ve said it before but honestly it bears repeating, this story is so well crafted. The carefully structured wording and piecemeal revelations of the characters’ lives that the reader gleans from each narrative could each act alone as reasons for reading this novel, but in this case we get to enjoy both.



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