While I Was Gone Explained

While I Was Gone
Author:Sue Miller
Country:United States
Language:English
Genre:Novel
Publisher:Alfred A. Knopf
Release Date:1999
Media Type:Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages:288 pp (first edition hardcover)
Isbn:0-375-40112-1
Isbn Note:(first edition hardcover) & (paperback edition)
Dewey:813/.54 21
Congress:PS3563.I421444 W47 1999
Oclc:39539051

While I Was Gone is a 1999 novel by Sue Miller. It was chosen as an Oprah's Book Club selection in May 2000.[1]

Background

Miller conceived of While I Was Gone while in the middle of writing a memoir of her father's battle with Alzheimer's disease. Struggling with this story, she decided to return to writing fiction, deciding upon a story about a woman torn between her past and present lives.[2] Miller was also influenced by the murder trial of O. J. Simpson and the investigation of a 15-year-old boy in Boston, charged with allegedly killing one of his friends' mothers. She told the Telegram & Gazette: "I began to wonder how one could have done such a thing and still feel 'innocent.'"[3]

CBS adapted the novel into a TV movie in 2004, starring Kirstie Alley as Jo, Bill Smitrovich as Daniel, and Peter Horton as Eli.[4]

Plot

The novel is narrated by Jo Becker, a veterinarian. Becker lives in Adams Mills, a fictional small town in Massachusetts, with her husband Daniel, a minister. The two have three adult daughters including Sadie, a college student, and Cass, a touring rock singer. Several decades ago, in 1968, a young Jo had fled her upcoming marriage, assumed the false name of Felicia Stead, and moved into a group house in Cambridge living among bohemians. She spent a year there, but her idyllic getaway ended when she came home to find her best friend at the house, Dana Jablonski, murdered. The killer, believed to be a burglar, was never identified. Amid slander and insinuations in the local newspapers, the housemates drifted apart.

Jo's youngest daughter, Sadie, tells her that one of her favorite professors has moved to town. The professor brings a sick dog into Jo's clinic and mentions her husband Eli Mayhew, a scientist. Jo realizes that Eli was one of her old housemates. Jo is attracted to Eli, once nerdy but now well-built and confident, and the two begin spending time together in a relationship bordering on an affair. However, Jo has unresolved questions about Eli's potential role in Dana's death. Eli ultimately confesses to the murder, claiming that his research career has redeemed his past, and Jo must decide whether to turn him in to the police.

The epigraph to the novel is a poem by Miller's mother, Judith Beach Nichols.[5]

Critical reception

The novel was praised in The New York Times, which wrote: "The story is at once so well made and vividly imagined that one might call it an exercise in spontaneous craftsmanship." The Los Angeles Times also praised the review, calling Miller "so good at rendering the everyday world into which crisis breaks."[6] Publishers Weekly, while overall positive, was more measured, calling some of the plot points "convoluted."[7]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: While I Was Gone . Oprah.com . 25 April 2023.
  2. News: Basbanes . Nick . Sue Miller concludes the best way to convey reality is through fiction . Telegram & Gazette . 14 March 1999.
  3. News: Courtemanche . Dolores . Best-selling author prefers novel approach . Telegram & Gazette . 12 March 1999.
  4. News: Crook . John . Married to a man of the cloth, and all alone; In 'While I Was Gone,' Kirstie Alley plays a minister's wife whose discovery about a friend alters her life. . Los Angeles Times . 10 October 2004.
  5. News: Lehmann-Haupt . Christopher . 'While I Was Gone': The Past Comes Calling . 25 April 2023 . The New York Times . 28 January 1999.
  6. News: Harris . Michael . Book Review; A Deceptive Woman and a Harrowing Jolt . Los Angeles Times . 23 February 1999.
  7. Web site: While I Was Gone . Publishers Weekly . 25 April 2023.