As well read as I have been over the years, including many of the classics of Western literature, I have just gotten around to reading Gustav Flaubert’s Madame Bovary.
How to account for this gaping hole in a bibliographic odyssey that has included a thousand or so books over four or so decades? I dunno. Maybe I thought this particular classic was a Doctor Zhivago without the snow.
Boy was I wrong.
Emma Bovary is in some respects the prototypical “Desperate Housewife,� a manic depressive spendthrift with eating and panic disorders who makes her life into a novel to escape the emptiness of her existence in rural France.
But like many great books, the message that I took from Madame Bovary resonates even more powerfully today than when Flaubert introduced it in the mid-19th century to a public alternately titillated and shocked by its sexual innuendo.
For me, that message is that there is no lonelier a woman than one who demeans her sex but uses it to get special favors.
Please click here to read more at Kiko’s House.