The Virgin Suicides (2024)
In the pantheon of late 20th-century literary artifacts, Jeffrey Eugenides’ The Virgin Suicides occupies a singular, spectral space. Published in 1993, it is a novel that defies easy categorization: part suburban gothic, part elegy, part forensic investigation, and part collective fever dream. Told from the first-person plural perspective of an unnamed chorus of neighborhood boys decades after the fact, the novel is not really a whodunit or a psychological case study. It is, instead, an extended meditation on the impossibility of knowing—an autopsy performed on memory, desire, and the way we mythologize the very people we fail to understand.
While the story treats the sisters as a collective unit, two figures stand out: the youngest, Cecilia, and the second youngest, Lux. The Virgin Suicides