The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D.
Nichole Bernier’s
novel, The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D. explores the multi-dimensional
facets of personhood. It reminds me of Elizabeth
Strout’s collection of stories about her eponymous protagonist Olive Kitteridge. In each story, Kitteridge reveals a different
dimension of herself depending on her role and relationship with the other
characters. Similarly, Bernier examines,
in her novel, the ways one character expresses and represses different aspects
of herself. The integration of the different
selves into one person can be difficult.
In Bernier’s
novel, Elizabeth dies in a plane crash leaving her husband and three young
children without a wife and mother. Her
will states that her friend Kate should be the recipient of her trunk full of journals.
The narrator suggests that Kate and Elizabeth are good friends. But as Kate
begins reading Elizabeth’s journals, Kate realizes just how little she knew
about Elizabeth. Their friendship begins
when Elizabeth and Kate meet at a playgroup for their young kids. The intensity
of raising young children is overwhelming and their shared journey of
motherhood forges a bond between them. In this dimension of Elizabeth’s self, she is a confident, capable and loving mother.
Yet, as Kate
begins reading Elizabeth’s journals, she learns that Kate had a sister who died
when Elizabeth was twelve. It becomes clear to Kate that Elizabeth’s sister’s
death was the pivotal event of Elizabeth’s life. Filled with guilt, shame and pain for the
girl she had been, Elizabeth cannot shake the feeling that she killed her
sister. Elizabeth’s parents divorce, her mother starts drinking and Elizabeth
carries, like an internal weight, the guilt of the family’s disintegration. Elizabeth does not trust anyone; she learns to only confide
in her journals. How can she trust another person when she doesn't even trust herself?
Elizabeth marries
Dave Martin who is congenial and caring, but emotionally undemanding. There is good chemistry but she knows little
about him and he knows even less about her. At some level she feels unworthy of
a deeper connection. In her mind, she had
killed her sister. Elizabeth wants to escape
the sad, lonely and depressed girl she had become after the accident. She wills
herself to be upbeat, cheerful and light. But she wrestles with her darker
emotions by writing in her journals. She
represses her feelings and makes safe emotional connections with people that don’t
probe and push to discover more about her. Thought one could argue it is a gift
to have the opportunity to reinvent oneself by omitting formative facts from one’s
youth, in Elizabeth’s case, her firm façade was beginning to crack and bigger
issues were emerging.
Elizabeth lives
with the snowball effect of never processing the trauma of her youth. She keeps the ordeal and its aftermath to
herself by hiding her suffering through sins of omission and bravely wearing a happy
face.
Kate is stunned
about this “other Elizabeth” she finds in the journals and concludes that she
(and all people) should act with more empathy since everyone is suffering about
something, even those we think we know well.
These journals spur Kate to think about her marriage, career and life choices.
Elizabeth’s journals also teach Kate to be more honest with herself and those
around her. To paraphrase Kate, if you
knew all there was to know about another person, you could forgive them anything.
Bernier’s
ambitious novel attempts to explore the dimensions of friendship, honesty,
repression, guilt, secrets, isolation and the gift of journal writing as the
most honest form of self expression. Given the enormity of her task, she mostly
succeeds. The Unfinished Work of Elizabeth D. reminds us of the
emotional burdens people carry and encourages us to act with empathy and grace
whether we know their burdens or not.