Otterbein Aegis Spring 2010

Page 108

Aegis 2010

108

Book Review >>> Jennifer Rish

The Other Guterson, David. New York: Vintage, 2009. 272 pp.

David Guterson’s The Other is a haunting story about the choice between being a part of society and not being a part of it. The novel is about two men who meet running high school track and eventually become partners in a symbiotic relationship they do not understand, and a friendship that they understand even less. One of the men, Neil Countryman, ends up living a normal life as an English teacher and father of two. The other, John William Barry, retreats to the wilderness and eventually earns himself the title of “the hermit of the Hoh”. John William sets out into the Washington wilderness, shunning family wealth and the wiles of the world to live in a trailer, and when that is not remote enough, carves himself a cave out of limestone. Set in the state of Washington, The Other uses the dense forests at the end of the American frontier as a backdrop that contrasts the cosmopolitan bustle of modern day Seattle. When John William retreats from the world he retreats from it not to find himself, but to lose civilization in the retreat of his mind. The depth of John William’s removal becomes apparent as he becomes further removed, reading Gnostic gospels on the evils of the world and eventually accusing Neil of “sleepwalking through life” (169). However, Neil continues to support his friend in his endeavor, saying, “There was a part of me, at 28, with a wife, two kids, a house, a dog, and a job, that agreed with him,” (177). Neil has to deal with the hypocrisy that goes hand in hand with surviving in modern society, in the sense that the gains are more important than the losses. John William goes to the wilderness instead, and his suffering from his removal from society is unmistakable. Deep and tragic, The Other explores the depths and nature of friendship, despite how people change as time passes. As John William grows progressively more insane, Neil sticks to the blood oath they made as young men, providing him with basic necessities in the wilderness even as he denies wanting artifacts from civilization, which he calls “hamburger world,” (169). In the meantime, Neil wonders if John William may be right about the value of removing oneself from the backwards commercialized society we call home. Thematically, The Other explores the artistic question of whether it is possible to truly judge the world if we are a part of it, and if real art can be made by those mired in the system. Guterson shows in The Other that art cannot be successful in retreating and hating the world completely, but requires connection with the world to be of consequence. In its closing The Other leaves the reader wondering which of the two men made the correct choice. There is an obvious winner and loser when it comes to the physical state both men are left in by The Other’s ending, but still we are left to wonder who, in fact, managed to defeat “the unhappiness machine.”


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook

Articles inside

World of Literary Obsession – Stephanie Freas What it Is-Ashley Butler

16min
pages 120-132

Pride and Prejudice and Zombies – Jonna Stewart

4min
pages 114-115

Don’t Let the Bastards Get You Down – Christine Horvath

5min
pages 112-113

One Teacher in Ten: LGBT Educators Share Their Stories – Vianca Yohn

4min
pages 116-117

The Man Who Loved Books Too Much: The True Story of a Thief, a Detective, and a

4min
pages 118-119

Her Fearful Symmetry – Danielle Wood

4min
pages 110-111

The Other – Jennifer Rish

4min
pages 108-109

The Forever War – Justin McAtee

5min
pages 106-107

A Critique of Lafont’s Response to the Cognitive Dishonesty Objection – Larsa Ramsini

30min
pages 87-96

Armageddon in Retrospect – JT Hillier

8min
pages 99-101

Wetlands – Will Ferrall

4min
pages 104-105

When Everything Changed: The Amazing Journey of American Women from 1960 to

4min
pages 97-98

Atmospheric Disturbances – Boris Hinderer

5min
pages 102-103

The Nazi Ideology of German Womanhood – Eryn Kane

14min
pages 81-86

A Plagued Nation: A Psychoanalytic and Thematic Exploration of Charles Burns

38min
pages 62-80

My Body is a Pebble”: Death Drive, Repression, and Freeing the Self in Sylvia Plath’s

22min
pages 10-16

Creative Integrity Despite Oppression: Soviet Realism and Shostakovich’s Symphony

19min
pages 33-39

Uncovering the Politics of Hierarchy in Arundhati Roy’s The God of Small Things

34min
pages 40-51

China’s Quest for Natural Resources: The Environmental Impact on Africa – Will Ferrall

23min
pages 17-25

Ethnocentrism and Prejudice in Politics: Deconstructing the Myth of the Shi’a Crescent

26min
pages 52-61

Soviet, Japanese, and American Relations with China, 1949-1972: China’s Quest for

20min
pages 26-32

No

15min
pages 5-9
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.