
Middlesex
“Part Tristram Shandy, part Ishmael, part Holden Caulfield, Cal is a wonderfully engaging narrator…A deeply affecting portrait of one family’s tumultuous engagement with the American twentieth century.”
New York Times
ALA Stonewall Book Award - Honor Book, 2005
Nominated for International IMPAC Dublin Literary Award - Nominee, 2004
Among longlisted titles for Audible.com 100 Audible Essentials, 2007
ALA Stonewall Book Award - Honor Book, 2003
Nominated for Lambda Literary Award - Nominee, 2002
Winner of Pulitzer Prize - Winner, 2003
Among longlisted titles for (Selected for) Oprah's Book Club, 2007
Nominated for National Book Critics Circle Awards - Nominee, 2002
Nominated for National Book Critics Circle Award - Nominee, 2002
Winner of Great Lakes Book Award - Winner, 2003
Winner of Ambassador Book Award - Winner, 2003
Winner of Audie Award Winner, 2003
Winner of the 2003 Pulitzer Prize for Fiction and the Audie Award for best unabridged fiction, Middlesex marks the fulfillment of a huge talent, named one of America's best young novelists by both Granta and The New Yorker. In the spring of 1974, Calliope Stephanides, a student at a girls' school, Grosse Pointe, MI, finds herself drawn to a chain-smoking, strawberry-blonde classmate with a gift for acting. The passion that furtively develops between them - along with Callie's failure to develop - leads Callie to suspect that she is not like other girls. The explanation for this shocking state of affairs takes us out of suburbia - back before the Detroit race riots of 1967, before the rise of the Motor City, to 1922, when the Turks sacked Smyrna and Callie's grandparents fled for their lives, back to a tiny village in Asia Minor where two lovers, and one rare genetic mutation, set in motion the metamorphosis that will turn Callie into a being both mythical and perfectly real: a hermaphrodite. Sprawling across eight decades - and one unusually awkward adolescence - Jeffrey Eugenide's long-awaited second novel is a grand, utterly original fable of crossed bloodlines, the intricacies of gender, and the deep, untidy promptings of desire.
Praise
