Sex, secrets, and the liberal arts – The Boston Globe

Posted: January 29, 2022 at 11:43 pm

It starts with the cover photo: a male torso, shirt all the way open, hand lightly resting near crotch. Just the right amount of chest hair. The picture doesnt include his face because really what its concerned with is the body. The book jacket is undeniably sexy, and maybe a little bit embarrassing to carry around or read on the T.

The books title is Vladimir, and its one of the years buzziest new novels, a debut by Julia May Jonas. Mark that name. Shes very, very good.

Set on the campus of a small liberal arts college in upstate New York, Vladimir is narrated by an English professor in her late fifties. Shes arch, wry, knowing, a bit vain (she has little rules with herself for staying at her ideal weight), and given to sharp observations about herself (Ive always felt the origin of anger in my vagina and am surprised it is not mentioned more in literature) and others, from her students to her colleagues to her husband, chair of the English department. The husband, John (our narrator remains unnamed), has been sleeping with students for years, with the narrators knowledge and tacit approval (they have an arrangement), but the situation has proven untenable now that a petition has been signed by more than 300 people demanding he be fired.

I find this post hoc prudery offensive, our narrator proclaims, as a fellow female. The dalliances were consensual, she points out, the women of age. I want to throw them all a Slut Walk and let them know that when theyre sad, its probably not because of the sex they had, and more because they spend too much time on the internet, wondering what people think of them.

She is concerned about the changing social and sexual mores on the campus where she works. Nowadays you must be so careful, she says of the current generation of students. People said this crop of youth was weak, but we knew differently, she adds. They brought us to their knees with their softness, their consistent demand for the consideration of their feelings.

A professor swimming against the tide of a quickly changing culture is of course nothing new, nor is the campus novel. And if this conflict were all that concerned Jonas, Vladimir would perhaps fall flat. But Johns dalliances (or abuses of power) provide just one part of this richly plotted novels background; at the foreground is the newly arrived junior faculty member Vladimir Vladinski.

Although they typically operate these days as more roommates than spouses, the narrator and her husband invite Vladimir and his wife and child for a cookout by the pool soon after the family has moved to town. For John its an opportunity to get to know a new colleague, and maybe win him over in the upcoming deliberations about his future. For our narrator, the swimming party represents an opportunity to see Vladimirs body (a previous meeting, over a book and a martini, had already set something in motion). Even before he strips off his shirt to reveal a hirsute chest, shes pretty far gone. Some fundamental peace within me, already disrupted since spring and the allegations and the petition . . . had been entirely capsized, she thinks. I was swimming in an ocean of electrical impulses. I was a body made of walking nerves.

It doesnt help that Vladimirs wife didnt show up to the party. Our narrator knows a bit about her, enough to already feel competitive about Cynthia, with her credentials, her style, her ability to wear flat shoes and look graceful rather than stubby-legged, her what I assumed was effortless thinness, her buckets of potential, and her book deal based on her traumatic history that I knew a bit about from departmental rumors.

Our narrator has published two novels but hasnt written fiction in more than a decade. Her literary envy of both Vladimir and Cynthia is as powerful a force as the sexual attraction that sets in motion the events of the books plot. I wont summarize any more of it its too delicious to spoil. But its fair to say that Vladimir goes into such outrageous territory that my jaw literally dropped at moments while I was reading it. Theres a rare blend here of depth of character, mesmerizing prose, and fast-paced action.

The titular characters name isnt a total coincidence. Its natural to think of Nabokov and Lolita while reading Vladimir, with its throbbing throughline of inappropriate lust and its terrible consequences. For while Vladimir is not a teenaged girl (hes 40), hes still the object of a mad desire that spins out in dangerous and even violent directions. Our narrator may be more sympathetic than Humbert Humbert (shes not a pedophile, after all), but as the novel goes on its hard not to see some similarities. Anyone in the mood to read about campus politics, outrageous flirtations, moral quandaries, ill-conceived road trips, sexual adventures, and bad ideas in general will fall for Vladimir.

VLADIMIR

By Julia May Jonas

Avid Reader Press, 256 pages, $27

Kate Tuttle is a freelance writer and editor.

Kate Tuttle, a freelance writer and critic, can be reached at kate.tuttle@gmail.com.

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Sex, secrets, and the liberal arts - The Boston Globe

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