Standard Deviation is a bittersweet story
about a marriage that is under stress. Catherine Heiny keeps the
narration light and insightful about the age-old institutions: marriage and parenting through her cleverly drawn characters . It is about how marriage is when the initial romance buzz has
worn off and reality has checked in. The story is relatable.
Audra Dautry is Graham
Cavanaught’s second wife and she is everything his first wife, Elspeth was not.
Audra and Graham live in parallel universe and they try to create an ordinary life
for Matthew, their 10-year-old son who has Asperger’s. Audra is open and gregarious
to the extent that she will invite random people to their home to stay and the eccentric members of their son’s Origami club to Thanksgiving. Life
with talkative and super friendly Audra can be exhausting for 56-year-old Graham
who is introverted. One day befuddled Graham
decides to look up Elspeth on the
internet after bumping into her at a deli ordering a Reuben sandwich with
French dressing at the café.
‘ Graham took his
first sip of whisky and typed Elspeth’s name into the search engine.’
‘Elspeth didn’t have a
Facebook page, but that wasn’t really surprising. If someone asked her if she
was on Facebook, she would probably say, “ Why do I need to be on Facebook?”
(She had always been a conversation stopper kind of person.)’
His ex-wife isn’t on Twitter or Instagram,
either. He can only find her at Stover, Sheppard’s website. ‘There she was
: Elspeth Osbourne, partner, mergers and acquisitions.’
As the story begins, in
the midst of dealing with day to day difficulties and their love for a child
with Asperger, enter his ex-wife into his life with Audra who has always wanted
to know her. Can one possibly love two women who are vastly different in their personalities?
How can Graham be attracted to Audra’s obliviousness
and also Elspeth’s iciness?
Here is a snippet of the
conversation between Graham and Audra as they talk about Elspeth when they start
socializing with Elspeth and her partner Bentrup. To Graham, Elspeth and
Bentrup seem an entirely platonic couple, like Bert and Ernie but Audra is
curious about the kind of sex they have and whether she makes him wash his hands
first etc. Audra is hilarious.
‘Audra
shook her head. “ But she’s so fastidious and I’m so notoriously unfastidious.”
Notorious to whom? The general population or
men sh’d had sex with or what ?
Audra stopped stirring and looked at him.
Her hair was pulled back in a ponytail and her skin was flushed from the heat
of the double boiler. Graham would not have improved one single feature of her
face.’
Then Graham finds out about Audra from an unexplained
charge on their credit card.
‘ He didn’t get up from his desk. “ There’s a
charge on the credit card, “ he said “Back in Decemeber. A French restaurant in
the Village.”
She opened her mouth
slightly and then paused. He could almost see her considering various
explanations and rejecting them.’
Audra tells Graham that she has wanted so
many times to tell him.
'“ You’re having an
affair,” he said flatly.
“Not an affair,” she said, as though
scandalized.” More of a – a flirtation that got a little bit out of control. His name is is Jasper and he’s a photographer.”'
Heiny writes,
‘Oh, life was thick
with irony now. Sort of like baklava, layer after layer pressed down on each
other, with grit in between the layers and honey glossed over everything to
make it sweet. He was pleased with this analogy , or as close to pleased as he
go in these days where it seemed all emotions lay under a cool frost. He wanted
to tell Audra about it. But he didn’t, because not only would she have gasped
and said, “ Baklava! Jesus, I’d better order some for the Greek Room,” but
because he didn’t want to give anything right now – no gift, no peace offering-
no matter how humble.’
Katherine Heiny is clever
in translating the ordinary and mundane marriage life into something relatable
in real life. Standard Deviation is an excellent feel-good read for the weekend
if you want something satirical and charming as its narration is injected with humour. Standard Deviation is its author's debut novel.
The book opens with ‘Before
you became my mistress I led a blameless life’, a quotation from Laurie Colwin.
I have since learnt that Colwin died in 1992 and she was an author who wrote about contemporary life and manners in the domesticated world. click
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