12 March 2014

Review of Madame Bovary

5. Madame Bovary (Gustave Flaubert)

Pleasure: 7/10 Stars
Utility: 6/10

This is a harrowing book. Going into it, I had a good idea of the main theme of the novel (a warning about chasing after sensationalism) but I didn't realize what a stark warning it was. Don't read this book if you're prone to bi-polar disorder! The story opens following the life of Mr. Charles Bovary, a simple minded country doctor who takes great delight in the simple pleasures life has to offer. Eventually, however, he marries Emma (the Madame Bovary of the title), a fickle young woman prone to flights of fancy and idealistic tendencies. The story begins to focus on her and her perpetual dissatisfaction with the mundane, day to day life that is all Charles can offer her. Over the course of the novel she enters a couple of different affairs in an attempt to make her life more interesting. I knew going in that these tendencies must end in a disaster for her but what I did not realize was that she finally destroyed the lives of both her husband and daughter. I saw in this story the sordid tendencies of my own heart and how they wreak havoc not only on my own joy and peace but on the lives of so many others as well. And in Charles I saw a clumsy portrait of Christ. He loves Emma deeply and in his eyes she can do no wrong. It's only at the end of the book that he discovers her affairs and it destroys him. That's why the utility rating is so high. In my mind, this is a story designed to teach one simple lesson: People chase drama because our lives don't live up to a certain ideal that they have for how life is supposed to work. And as we chase it, we don't realize we are bringing destruction down on ourselves, all our friends and family, and (very most importantly) we wound the One who loves us more than words can describe, Jesus.

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