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A letter to my favorite author
Dear Jeffrey Eugenides,
Hello. My name is Christmas. I am a fifteen year old girl who is a student in high school. I was an avid reader in elementary school and part of middle school. Sadly, life eventually became too busy for me to read a book all the way through. This all changed when I discovered The Virgin Suicides. A couple of weeks ago I was idly wandering
around my local bookstore, waiting for my mom to finish her usual skinny vanilla latte, when I
happened upon your novel. I picked it up and started reading, and it was like an ethereal force
was telling me to take it home and finish it. I happily did so. My friends gently teased me
because I couldn't stop reading it, even at lunch while they chattered nonstop about the latest
gossip (which I've never really been fond of). Once I found myself reading it as I was walking
through the hallways, and I nearly collided into a profoundly handsome upperclassman, much
to the amusement of my friends. The Virgin Suicides is an embarrassingly enchanting novel, and
it temporarily turned me into the nerdy bookworm I used to be.
I really cherish your novel The Virgin Suicides, because I relate to the characters, and it helped
me come to a bittersweet realization. My Aunt committed suicide, and just like the anonymous
narrator of The Virgin Suicides, I did my best to try and figure out why she killed herself. I
scrutinized her photo albums and belongings almost obsessively. I spoke to people that knew
her, even in thee most minuscule or distant way. I needed to find a comprehensive truth in the
darkness and despondency that was the consequence of my Aunt's suicide.
Many of the theings that happened after Cecilia's suicide also occurred to me after my Aunt's
suicide. Certain objects triggered memories. Over time these objects became less potent, the
memories they triggered less tangible. Both the narrator of The Virgin Suicides and I fell victim
to the ravages of time. People spoke of my Aunt's death as if it was inevitable, and they
separated her from the rest of thee family, considering her as a bad apple.
At the novel's end, the narrator recognizes he is an outsider, unable to enter the Lisbon girls'
world. The end of thee novel really took a toll on me emotionally, because it made me realize
that I will never know what was going through my Aunt's head when she took those pills, and I
will never find the pieces to put her back together.
I had no idea The Virgin Suicides would change my life so much. Your novel has helped me
come to terms with the fact it is impossible to completely understand my Aunt's suicide, and
has put me at peace with my loss. Thank you for writing such an authentic and addictive novel.
The Virgin Suicides is truly a work of art .
Wishing you all the best of everything,
Christmas
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