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Scenes From A Marriage And Economy In Free Fall

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  • Scenes From A Marriage And Economy In Free Fall

    SCENES FROM A MARRIAGE AND ECONOMY IN FREE FALL
    Julian Guthrie

    The Associated Press
    Published: Mar 10, 2011

    It was a line by Somerset Maugham about how marriage renders people
    uninteresting that inspired Carol Edgarian's new book about middle
    age and middle marriage, about what happens "post-blush."

    "I read this line in 'Razor's Edge' and thought, Mr. Maugham, I beg to
    differ," said Edgarian, whose new novel, "Three Stages of Amazement,"
    looks at what happens in middle age, when love is no longer fresh
    and potential seems no longer limitless, when dreams go unrealized
    and tragedy visits.

    "Middle age and middle marriage are really interesting ground for
    me," said Edgarian, who is 48, has been married for 17 years, and has
    two daughters and a stepdaughter. "The assumption for much of life
    is that you are in command of where you get. But fate plays a much
    larger hand. Babies die. Markets turn. People get ill. Money runs
    out. You fall in love and yet the love is not enough to sustain you.

    So what happens when you are tested?"

    Edgarian's new work comes 17 years after the publication of her
    best-selling debut novel, "Rise the Euphrates," about three generations
    of Armenian American women living in Connecticut.

    Set in San Francisco, "Three Stages of Amazement," published this
    week by Scribner and already in its third printing, tells the story
    of Lena Rusch and her husband, Charlie Pepper, casting them at the
    start as "part of the generation of winners" who believe that, with
    "luck and push," they "would have everything."

    The book moves from confidence to uncertainty, coming to rest tenuously
    in between.

    "There are these two main characters who have arrived at middle age
    and have been running on the assumption of limitless potential," said
    Edgarian, sitting in a cafe near her home in lower Pacific Heights.

    "The jig is up and they have to confront real limitations."

    The journey of Lena and Charlie mirrors the book's broader context.

    The story begins on New Year's Eve 2008 and ends a year later,
    a period following market meltdowns, bank failures, foreclosures
    and bankruptcies, and the election of Barack Obama as the nation's
    44th president.

    "There had been this false promise," Edgarian said of the buildup to
    the market crash. "Suddenly, in this country, resources felt limited
    and people were forced to adjust. This was really a watershed moment
    for America, a period of retrenching where we don't know exactly
    where we will end up."

    Challenges

    Edgarian's characters - whether primary, secondary or tertiary -
    are faced with challenges, some convulsive, some slight. "All of my
    characters are at a moment of crisis when we meet them," Edgarian
    said. "Whatever they thought was going to be life is challenged,
    and they've got to figure out a new dance."

    Edgarian in person is similar to Edgarian in print: The surface is
    gilded and lovely, confident and balanced. Underneath, though, is a
    sharper edge, a darker humor, a perpetual questioning. There is an
    acknowledgement that life gets messy.

    Edgarian only reluctantly talks about her "classically unhappy
    childhood," spent mostly in West Hartford, Conn. Her parents, Gerald
    and Barbara Edgarian, both first-generation immigrants, were like
    "gas and matches," she says with a wry laugh. They divorced, and the
    family moved around. She has two older siblings and a stepsister 17
    years her junior.

    "I'm that cliched under-the-covers-writing girl," Edgarian said.

    "Reading and writing is how I got through my childhood. I read
    everything, from drama and Tolkien to Austen. The books were my
    closest friends in my young years."

    After graduating from Stanford, Edgarian worked for a high-tech public
    relations firm.

    "Our early client was Microsoft when it was Bill Gates and a group of
    guys," Edgarian said. "It was Palo Alto 1984, when Silicon Valley
    was just starting to explode." Edgarian was writing everything
    from technical manuals and news releases to speeches for venture
    capitalists.

    In 1986, Edgarian attended the Squaw Valley writers' conference to
    remind herself she was a "real writer." It was there she met her
    future husband, Tom Jenks, senior editor at Scribner's. She had a
    rough 75 pages of what would become her debut novel.

    "He read it and wanted to publish it," Edgarian said. "I said I would
    finish it in six months. It was published in 1994."

    Online magazine

    Between "Rise the Euphrates" and "Three Stages of Amazement,"
    Jenks and Edgarian had two daughters, Lucy, 15, and Liv, 9 (Jenks'
    daughter Riley is 25). The two taught creative writing and launched the
    online literary magazine Narrative Magazine in 2003. The magazine's
    objective is to "advance the best of storytelling in the digital
    age and provide a free modern library." The site has more than 3,000
    stories in its archive.

    "We have a small core staff and 100 volunteers," Edgarian said.

    Putting in up to 60 hours a week on Narrative, Edgarian has had to
    "steal time" for her own writing, often starting to work after the
    kids were asleep. She said that she and Jenks - a former editor for
    Esquire and the Paris Review - have no safety net, and "we make it
    up day to day."

    San Francisco, her adopted home, is the place where "much of what's
    good in my life has happened," Edgarian noted. She writes in her new
    novel of its splendor and ethos, of its "foggy morals": "The city had
    been crushed three times by fires and earthquakes, and each time it
    rose again. Lovely, whitewashed, beguiling, it was built by dreamers
    on seven square miles of whim."

    As she reflected on "Three Stages of Amazement," she recalled the line
    from Maugham: "When male and female, after whatever vicissitudes you
    like, are at last brought together they have fulfilled their biological
    function and interest passes to the generation that is to come."

    It was precisely this stage - when the drive of marriage is fulfilled
    and life sets in - that excited Edgarian. "I wanted to focus on
    the realities of kids, career, money, grief and disappointment," she
    said. "With marriages that last, there is a continual renewal. You lose
    each other and find each other. Your horizons may not be as expansive,
    but it's a time to go deeper. I really like this time of life."

    To read The Chronicle review of Carol Edgarian's book "Three Stages
    of Amazement," go to www.sfgate.com.




    From: A. Papazian
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