I read The Gerts’ review of Jean Hanff Korelitz’s The Plot and, as a sucker for campus novels (or professorial life), I knew this was the sort of book I’d like. The Plot concerns Jacob Finch Bonner (Jake) a creative writing professor at the third rate private university, Ripley College. Jake’s fame as a writer was brief but seductive; he wrote one bestseller, another which sank without a trace, and a number of unpublished novels now gathering dust. Jake is unable to produce anything close to The Invention of Wonder, and his brief glittering writing success, which at this point he’d prefer not to be mentioned, is in the rear view mirror. He’s bitter, so imagine then, his frustration and resentment at having to read abominable stories and first chapters written by his students. Working with eager students who deliriously imagine a writing career was “going to suck his soul.”
If that isn’t bad enough, he also has to deal with various types. His workshop contained not one but two women who cited Elizabeth Gilbert as their inspiration, another who hoped to write a series of mysteries organized around “numerical principles,” a man who already had 600 pages of a novel based on his life (he was only up to his adolescence) and a gentleman from Montana who seemed to be writing a new version of Victor Hugo’s Les Misérables, albeit with Victor Hugo’s “mistakes” corrected.
But there’s another student Evan Parker (he’d already pissed off Jake at a BBQ the night before). Evan is a smug, arrogant young man, big, brawny, blonde, convinced that no one can teach creative writing and so Jake’s class is hence irrelevant and a complete waste of time. Evan gets under Jake’s skin immediately–and it’s no wonder. The teaching gig is the last shred of Jake’s dignity and here is Evan ripping Jake’s fragile ego-band-aid away. Evan is rude in class, bragging up his book and yet strangely cagey to share it. Immediately there’s a whiff of threatened plagiarism in the air. At first Jake sees Evan as an arrogant bore incapable of writing anything decent but then Evan’s succinct comment begins to make Jake think.
Either it’s a good plot or it isn’t. And if it’s a good plot, the best writing isn’t going to help. and if it is, the worst writing isn’t going to hurt it.
A very skeptical Jake reads a sample of Evan’s novel, and Jake is forced to admit that Evan is a “natural writer.” Evan is sure he has a best-seller, and eventually he tells Jake the plot. Jake is stunned by the twists and turns of the plot and reluctantly acknowledges to himself that yes, Evan has a best-seller on his hands.
Fast forward two and a half years, and Jake is now eking out a humiliating living as a freelance editor; he’s even further down the rung of creative writing. One day, spurred by curiosity, he looks up Evan on the internet and discovers that Evan died. Evan’s parents and sister are also dead. Jake can’t resist using Evan’s plot to create a novel, and so Crib is born, and Jake becomes a bestselling author with tours, an Oprah endorsement, and a movie version in the works. Jake seems to be on the top of the world and then anonymous emails begin to emerge accusing him of stealing Crib. The anonymous messages begin to appear on social media and eventually Jake, at the height of his success, is in the middle of a full-blown scandal.
Initially The Plot seemed to be taking me to some familiar places–an author stalked by some psycho, but The Plot is much cleverer than that, and so I was delighted when Korelitz pulled me into … I’m going to say it … Highsmith territory. Korelitz is quite aware of the Highsmith connection–Jake teaches at Ripley College and the anonymous email author calls himself “Talented Tom.”
Gradually Korelitz reveals Evan Parker’s plot through chapters of Crib. The Plot is a great mystery but it also raises questions regarding plagiarism. Jake ‘stole’ Evan Parker’s idea for a plot but as he explains “the migration of a story is something we recognise and we respect. Works of art can overlap, or they can sort of chime with one another.” Adding “Jane Smiley stole A Thousand Acres from Shakespeare [or] Charles Frazier stole Cold Mountain from Homer.“
All too often a fictional book within a fiction book is drab, but in this case, the tension, pace and mystery are intense. That said, I did guess the BIG MAIN PUZZLE, but then I read a lot of crime books so my mind is twisted.
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