37 pages • 1 hour read
Jean Hanff KorelitzA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
Excerpts from Jake’s novel Crib develop alongside Jake’s exploration of the true events behind his novel. Some of the parallels turn out to be eerily accurate. In one section of Crib, Jake writes that Samantha “wanted an abortion [...] but there was an unfortunate complication, namely that her mother and father were Christians [...] the Hell-has-a-special-waiting-room-for-you kind. Also, the laws of the state of New York gave them veto power over Samantha” (133). As he lay dying, Anna tells Jake that, like Samantha, she had “Zero chance of an abortion. Zero support for giving the baby up for adoption, either. You were spot-on with all that, actually, the way you wrote it. That’s absolutely what it was like for me.” (307). This section shows how fiction can resemble fact.
However, Jake cannot imagine that a mother could murder her daughter with premeditation. Jake writes Samantha killing Maria accidentally, in the heat of a fight, categorizing it a crime of passion. In real life, Dianna planned each of her murders. As Jake is dying, Anna asks, “And that’s where the dividing line is? [...] Between something any of us might do under the circumstances and something only a truly evil person would do? Planning it?” (301).
The Plot wants the juxtaposition of Anna’s and Samantha’s stories to read like an expose of the flaws of fiction, illustrating that “Truth being stranger than fiction was, itself, a truth universally acknowledged” (286). However, since the entire novel, not just the novel-within-a-novel, is fiction, it’s unclear whether Jake’s failure of the imagination is truly a blind spot of the form, or just his own inability to connect with others.
Pineapple stencils first appear in the short section of Evan’s writing Jake reads. In the piece, the comfortable image of the fruit belies the reality of Evan’s protagonist’s life: “old stenciling […] Around the inside of the front door, for example [...] Apparently, the pineapple symbolized hospitality, which made it about the last thing that belonged on the wall of their home, because [her] life was the opposite of hospitality” (31). What Jake doesn’t realize is that Evan has used a real detail from his home to make a point about the tone of their familial interactions. It is this detail that helps Jake realize Evan’s plot comes from Dianna’s real life: “He’d known the moment he saw those old pineapples stenciled around the door of the Parker home in West Rutland” (288). Jake’s eye for detail here is contrasted with all the obvious-in-retrospect clues that he misses, like Anna’s cookbook—he is much more attuned to protecting himself from exposure for plagiarism than catching details that could have saved his life.
Soup plays an important role in Jake’s murder. Jake’s terrible cooking keeps him from using the kitchen, but after Anna and Jake move in together, “the refrigerator and freezer were full of her delicious food: homemade soups and stews” (247). Specifically, Jake mentions “a spinach soup Anna liked to cook, so intensely green it made you feel healthier just looking at it” (227). This soup is the equivalent of Chekov’s gun: It becomes a murder weapon.
For Anna, the soup is a tie to her past. She mentions that “one of the only good things my mother gave me [is] that soup” (303). She also keeps her “mom’s cookbook with all her recipes, including the one for that soup you like”—though Anna has been playing a dangerous game with the book, leaving it sitting in “the kitchen for months” despite the fact that it’s labeled Parker (311-312).
Anna kills Jake with a special version of this recipe: There “was Valium in the soup [...] definitely was not in my mother’s version” (310). The soup, in the end, symbolizes Jake’s naivety when it comes to women and domesticity.
By Jean Hanff Korelitz
American Literature
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