Cover of The Corrections

Book Highlights

The Corrections

by Jonathan Franzen

What it's about

This novel explores the dysfunction and decay of the Lambert family as they attempt to reconcile their personal failures with their midwestern upbringing. It examines the psychological toll of the American Dream and the messy, often contradictory reality of trying to maintain family ties while pursuing individual identity.

Key ideas

  • The burden of ordinariness: Society pressures everyone to be extraordinary, forgetting that the majority must remain ordinary to keep the world functioning.
  • The illusion of control: Humans are trapped by their desire for infinite control and self-deception, which often crumbles when faced with the limitations of the body and mind.
  • The power of perspective: Life is often a collection of moments where shifting your mindset changes your entire experience of reality, rendering internal shifts more significant than external ones.
  • The prison of the past: Family dynamics are rarely escaped, as childhood experiences and dinner table habits remain etched in our identities for a lifetime.

You'll love this book if...

  • You enjoy sprawling, character-driven studies that dissect the absurdity of modern life and family tension.
  • You're looking for a sharp, cynical, and deeply human look at how people lie to themselves to get through the day.

Best for

Anyone dealing with the complex, often painful reality of returning home to family as an adult.

Books with the same vibe

  • Freedom by Jonathan Franzen
  • The Marriage Plot by Jeffrey Eugenides
  • Revolutionary Road by Richard Yates

30 popular highlights from this book

Key Insights & Memorable Quotes

The most popular highlights from The Corrections, saved by readers on Screvi.

“And when the event, the big change in your life, is simply an insight—isn't that a strange thing? That absolutely nothing changes except that you see things differently and you're less fearful and less anxious and generally stronger as a result: isn't it amazing that a completely invisible thing in your head can feel realer than anything you've experienced before? You see things more clearly and you know that you're seeing them more clearly. And it comes to you that this is what it means to love life, this is all anybody who talks seriously about God is ever talking about. Moments like this.”
“The human species was given dominion over the earth and took the opportunity to exterminate other species and warm the atmosphere and generally ruin things in its own image, but it paid this price for its privileges: that the finite and specific animal body of this species contained a brain capable of conceiving the infinite and wishing to be infinite itself.”
“And meanwhile the sad truth was that not everyone could be extraordinary, not everyone could be extremely cool; because whom would this leave to be ordinary?”
“Fiction is a solution, the best solution, to the problem of existential solitude.”
“Without privacy there was no point in being an individual.”
“He couldn't figure out if she was immensely well adjusted or seriously messed up.”
“Life, in her experience, had a kind of velvet luster. You looked at yourself from one perspective and all you saw was weirdness. Move your head a little bit, though, and everything looked reasonably normal.”
“So, what, you got cigarette burns, too?" Gitanes said. Chip showed his palm, "It's nothing." "Self-inflicted. You pathetic American.""Different kind of prison" Chip said.”
“What you discovered about yourself in raising children wasn't always agreeable or attractive.”
“His tiredness hurt so much it kept him awake.”
“Robin turned and looked straight into her. "What's life for?""I don't know.""I don't either. But I don't think it's about winning.”
“Elective ignorance was a great survival skill, perhaps the greatest.”
“He wanted this someone to see how much he hurt.”
“she was so much a personality and so little anything else that even staring straight at her he had no idea what she really looked like.”
“Here was a torture that Greek inventors of the Feast and the Stone had omitted from their Hades: the Blanket of Self-Deception. A lovely warm blanket as far as it covered the soul in torment, but it never quite covered everything.”
“It was a way of recognizing places of enchantment: people falling asleep like this.”
“And when the event, the big change in your life, is simply an insight-- isn't that a strange thing? That absolutely nothing changes except that you see things differently and you're less fearful and less anxious and generally stronger as a result: isn't it amazing that a completely invisible thing in your head can feel realer than anything you've experienced before?”
“Nothing got inside the head without becoming pictures.”
“Oh, misanthropy and sourness. Gary wanted to enjoy being a man of wealth and leisure, but the country was making it none too easy. All around him, millions of newly minted American millionaires were engaged in the identical pursuit of feeling extraordinary - of buying the perfect Victorian, of skiing the virgin slope, of knowing the chef personally, of locating the beach that had no footprints. There were further tens of millions of young Americans who didn't have money but were nonetheless chasing the Perfect Cool. And meanwhile the sad truth was that not everyone could be extraordinary, not everyone could be extremely cool; because whom would this leave to be ordinary? Who would perform the thankless work of being comparatively uncool?”
“She wondered: How could people respond to these images if images didn't secretly enjoy the same status as real things? Not that images were so powerful, but that the world was so weak. It could be read, certainly, in its weakness, as on days when the sun baked fallen apples in orchards and the valley smelled like cider, and cold nights when Jordan had driven Chadds Ford for dinner and the tires of her Chevrolet had crunched on the gravel driveway; but the world was fungible only as images. Nothing got inside the head without becoming pictures.”
“He had a happy canine way of seeking approval without seeming insecure.”
“Being dead's only a problem if you know you're dead, which you never do because you're dead!”
“And if you sat at the dinner table long enough, whether in punishment or in refusal or simply in boredom, you never stopped sitting there. Some part of you sat there all your life.”
“He'd lost track of what he wanted, and since who a person was what a person wanted, you could say that he'd lost track of himself.”
“What made drugs perpetually so sexy was the opportunity to be other. Years after he'd figured out that pot only made him paranoid and sleepless, he still got hard-ons at the thought of smoking it. Still lusted for that jailbreak.”
“He was remembering the nights he'd sat upstairs with one or both of his boys or with his girl in the crook of his arm, their damp bath-smelling heads hard against his ribs as he read aloud to them from "Black Beauty" or "The Chronicles of Narnia". How his voice alone, its palpable resonance, had made them drowsy. These were evenings, and there were hundreds of them, maybe thousands, when nothing traumatic enough to leave a scar had befallen the nuclear unit. Evenings of plain vanilla closeness in his black leather chair; sweet evenings of doubt between the nights of bleak certainty. They came to him now, these forgotten counterexamples, because in the end, when you were falling into water, there was no solid thing to reach for but your children.”
“The problem was money and the indignities of life without it. Every stroller, cell phone, Yankees cap, and SUV he saw was a torment. He wasn't covetous, he wasn't envious. But without money he was hardly a man.”
“She had to tell him, while she still had time, how wrong he’d been and how right she’d been. How wrong not to love her more, how wrong not to cherish her and have sex at every opportunity, how wrong not to trust her financial instincts, how wrong to have spent so much time at work and so little with the children, how wrong to have been so negative, how wrong to have been gloomy, how wrong to have run away from life, how wrong to have said no, again and again, instead of yes: she had to tell him all of this, every single day.”
“THE CORRECTION, when it finally came, was not an overnight bursting of a bubble but a much more gentle letdown, a year-long leakage of value from key financial markets, a contraction too gradual to generate headlines and too predictable to seriously hurt anybody but fools and the working poor.”
“You encountered a misery near the end of the day and it took a while to gauge its full extent. Some miseries had sharp curvature and could be negotiated readily. Others had almost no curvature and you knew you'd be spending hours turning the corner. Great whopping-big planet-sized miseries.”

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