Saturday, May 22, 2010

Review of The Lonely Polygamist by Brady Udall

Brady Udall 's latest novel, The Lonely Polygamist, weighs in at almost 600 pages. As the title suggests, it's the story of a polygamist living out west and how he deals-- or doesn't deal-- with his four wives and twenty-plus children. He's also working on a construction project in Nevada which requires him to be away from home for extended periods of time. He tells everyone he's working on building a senior center. Brothel, senior center, those are pretty much the same, right? No wonder the book is 599 pages. That's a lot of ground to cover.

Udall knows of what he writes. The Udall family is one of the most well known Mormon families in the U.S., and one of the most prominent in the western part of the country.

Golden Richards, the main character in the book, ends up becoming a Mormon-- and a polygamist-- through a series of events. His four wives, of course, play a prominent role in the book. Each one is very different from the next. Beverly, the first wife, is strict and severe. Nola and Rose-of-Sharon are sisters. And Trish, the fourth and youngest wife, has a backbone, not what we'd expect in a polygamist household. Add in nearly 30 children and there is major bedlam all the time.

Golden also looks back on the several children he's lost, and those parts of the book were the most poignant for me. What also struck me were the sections on Rusty, one of Golden's sons. Rusty is ignored by everyone in the family and desperately wants to be noticed. I have no idea what it's like to be a "plyg kid" as Udall calls them, but I got a good sense from reading about Rusty.

Large chunks of the book take place in Nevada, where Golden is working. While there, he has to contend with a boss from hell and his love for another woman, who happens to be said boss's wife. Toss in some other characters--thugs, wayward Mormons, religious Mormons-- and you have a book which is bursting at the seams.

In the course of the book, Golden never seems to make a real decision. Things just "happen" to him. And it was interesting to follow the course of his life-- and the lives of his family-- to see where they would end up.

This book is dense and descriptive. It's funny and sad. It gets to the core of human nature. It seemed like it was trying to be the "Great American Novel-- Polygamist Version." In many ways, it succeeded, but there were some threads that I couldn't quite grab on to.

Just One Pink gives The Lonely Polygamist an 8.