Joyce Carol Oates: My Sister, My Love

Aux Features Books
Joyce Carol Oates: My Sister, My Love

It's no surprise that prolific super-novelist
Joyce Carol Oates, with her appetite for revealing Gothic horrors in family
sagas, would choose to pick up the JonBenet Ramsey case for her latest
true-crime effort. (1995's "Zombie," about Jeffrey Dahmer, was another notable
one.) Beauty pageants become ice-skating competitions and suburban Colorado is
swapped for old-money New Jersey in My Sister, My Love, but the disclaimer at
the front of the book only makes it clearer how closely the story following
hews to what is known about the still-unsolved murder case—and how
unsatisfying people still find its meager facts.

Oates' novel explores the Ramsey case through an
observer whom even dedicated CNN viewers might not have been aware of: the
victim's older brother. Now 19 and estranged from his parents, Skyler Rampike
is holed up in a dingy New Brunswick boarding house, writing a tell-all whose
copious footnotes, crossed-out lines, and clever chapter titles don't soften
his sister's ever-present voice. Skyler was supposed to be a gymnastics
prodigy, but parents Betsey and Bix gave up on him after a bad fall at
practice. When his sister Edna Louise shows some rinkside promise on a
playdate, she becomes Bliss, the youngest star of the girls' ice-skating
circuit, with the help of makeup, elaborate costumes, and a team of coaches.
Her performances and Betsey's investment in them strain the Rampikes' marriage
to the point that Bix moves out; he isn't at home, in fact, the night Bliss
disappears from bed, although he returns in time to discover her body in the
basement.

One of Skyler's chapters consists of the line,
"And they all lived horribly ever after." That's a pretty good summary of the
Olympics of guilt through which Oates puts her teenage narrator as he accounts
specifically for his crime, revealed in the first chapter, of ignoring his
sister's calls the night of the murder. (Bliss was a bed-wetter, as JonBenet
was rumored to be, and relied on Skyler to hide the evidence from their mom.)
The spiky satire of suburban life, from the fictional maladies with which
Skyler is diagnosed to the deck of index cards on which Betsey plots every
grocery-store encounter with local society gives way to the familiar Oatesian
trope of the intertwining impulses to self-defend and self-punish. At nearly
600 pages, Skyler's narrative eventually apes the self-aggrandizement he spots
in his parents, but by then, readers may just want to change the channel.

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