5/13/2023 0 Comments Arcadia by lauren groffWith Bit as something of a nonparticipant, the book’s best character is Hannah when illustrating Hannah’s decline, Groff is at her best. The dilemma at the core of Arcadia is the choice between freedom and community and, beyond that, the different ways to create a utopia. At the same time his mother, Hannah, is being slowly betrayed by her aging body. As Bit assimilates to life on the outside, he comes into his own as a photographer, observing and documenting the world around him but not acting on it. The reader sees this through the eyes of the diminutive outsider Bit, who spends his kidhood in Arcadia and subsequently flees the commune with his disillusioned parents. Strong ideals need strong people to uphold them, and Arcadia crumbles when faced with forces much bigger and more powerful than the splintering collective. The novel opens on a hippie commune-a sunny and idyllic place of bare breasts, fertile gardens and hard work well rewarded-and tracks its deterioration into a sinister place of drugs, hunger, filth and rotting power structures. Things fall apart in Arcadia, the 1960s utopia of Lauren Groff’s third book.
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