Middlesex

x, 529 pages ; 20 cm, 529 pages

English language

Published 2011 by Bloomsbury.

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(2 reviews)

16 editions

2022 #FReadom read 13/20

I just finished Jeffrey Eugenides' Middlesex, the 13th book in my 2022 #FReadom reading list of books removed or threatened in Texas libraries and schools. I found Cal Stephanides to be a truly scintillating narrative voice for a fascinating story.

Eugenides offers rich, multithreaded explorations of Detroit, Greek-American family life, and other areas near his own experience. And he may lead some readers to reflect on the meaning of sex & gender, despite rooting the story overall in rather binary notions of gender.

But I believe the novel's insights on gender identity and intersex reality would have been deeper & more insightful had Eugenides actually spoken with intersex people when writing the novel. Sadly, he didn't - a disappointing missed opportunity. www.intersexinitiative.org/popculture/middlesex-faq.html

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Subjects

  • Greek Americans Fiction.
  • Gender identity Fiction.
  • Intersexuality Fiction.
  • Teenage girls Fiction.
  • Mutation (Biology) Fiction.