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Nic @nml_dc's avatar

This made me realize that the reason I don't resonate with suburban malaise novels is they are campus fiction, but with too much homogeneity and not enough of the power differences that create the tensions in all the variations you mention. Closed system, forced interactions, that is the stuff of beautiful friction.

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Madeleine Murphy's avatar

I might be missing the point, but this reminds me a bit of Jane Austen's comment that "3 or 4 families in a country village is the very thing to work on." That principle can apply to novels with lots of people house-sharing as they make their way into adulthood in the Big City. Creating a world bound together by something specific, whether it's geography, or getting a degree, or how to deal with Henry VIII as he gets more and more mental, lets you see lots of bigger forces so much more clearly. You know who else maybe writes campus novels? Dickens. London is a campus. People arrive on stagecoaches and tumble out of windows and pick their way down its muddy streets, all sharing the challenge of being part of the crazy quilt. (And "Real Life" was brilliant, and I've preordered "The Late Americans.")

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