Household Words: A Novel
by Joan Silber
New Fiction
A review by Elizabeth Judd
One bizarre outgrowth of American democracy is that snobbery afflicts all social
strata equally; a suburban housewife can be more supercilious than any moneyed
aristocrat. Joan Silber, whose Ideas
of Heaven was short-listed for the National Book Award last year, rivals Sinclair
Lewis in her ability to dissect the persistent one-upmanship of life on Main Street.
Set in New Jersey in the 1940s and 1950s, Silber's 1980 novel Household Words
-- recently reissued after years out of print -- chronicles the domestic travails
of Rhoda Taber, a former French teacher who considers herself a cut above the
rest. With a nervy bravado, Rhoda, married and the mother of two, lives the American
dream while deriding its heartiness, its optimism, its flabbiness. "Rhoda
hated all fat things. She would chide loose-fleshed old ladies: you just let
yourself go. Of chubby schoolchildren she asked: what does your mother
feed you?"
The sudden death of her husband hands Rhoda the perfect opportunity for escape,
but she lacks the imagination to seize it, and thus continues to endure the
machinations of her sour, impenetrable daughters (whom she finds "not enjoyable
children in general") and her father's unintelligible pornographic fantasies,
delivered in Yiddish. Household Words is a cult classic among fiction
writers, perhaps because Silber rigorously examines her character's pinched
and often unpleasant perspective with a near monastic purity. Rhoda's myopia
permeates every corner of the novel (one family, we're told, keeps pets "in
their permissive Gentile way"), and Silber never indulges in an ironic
aside or the soaring lyricism John Updike permitted himself when depicting the
similarly parochial Harry Angstrom. Although her refusal to compromise sometimes
bears a faint whiff of castor oil, Silber achieves a frighteningly vivid portrait
of smug, middle-class provincialism. Household Words is a virtuoso performance:
meticulously crafted, unflinching, and ultimately dazzling.
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