I do NOT see Jack as a "clinging wine" (I'm assuming that is a typo Truade and you meant Vine.) He is a husband and father. He deserves honesty and transparency in his marriage. Joy was well aware of his defiencies, so was she the clinging vine for wanting to stay in her marriage for thirty some years, if she felt she was settling and always making the consessions? I think not, nor is he now.
When they finally do get to her revealing her feelings for Tommy, she turns it on Jack, and uses his parents to deflect from her wrong. pg. 200-01 But usually their disputes were contained. They were about something not everything. Yesterday's had started out like that, focused on his wife's admission that yes, for a time she'd been in love, or something like love, with his old friend. But that perimeter had quickly been breached by Joy's claim that the issue between them now was about him, not Tommy."
I find this completely unfair. Joy knew he would not be able to dispute he had been struggling with his parents, and father's death. She used this, to take the attention off of her wrong doing.
I personally never saw Joy as the voice of common sense or anchor. She was enjoying the nomad life, the partying, the hollywood life, until she decided she wanted to settle down and have a baby. I did not see Tommy as a nice guy whatsoever. Tommy was concerned more about Joy's pregnancy than Jack because he was in love with her and was ingratiating himself to her. Tommy knew and took advantage of Jack's weaknesses. I have seen people like Tommy who are the best friend/partner, with their own personal agenda. I was expecting to read the baby was actually Tommy's from the way Russo described Tommy's part and feelings.
pg. 197 The entire time Joy was pregnant, nobody had been more solicitous of her than Tommy.....Griffin remembered vividly the first time he (Tommy) held the baby, how reluctantly he'd handed Laura back, then turned to him and said, "Mr. Lucky."
Tommy was jealous of Jack and he showed it many times by tellling Jack he was "lucky." He actually comes out and says when Jack sees him staring at Joy, not his own wife, pg. 191 "We're both lucky," Griffin would respond with a sweeping gesture, that included their lovely young wives....."Yeah, sure," Tommy always replied, "but there's luck and then there's luck."
Jack had suspicions prior to Joy admitting her feelings. pg. 190 -91 The day he found Joy sobbing in the shower, some part of him had known Tommy had to be involved. Even back when he and Elaine were still married and they were a foursome traipsing off to Mexico, Griffin knew about his friend's crush on Joy. At what point had his feelings for her been reciprocated? This Joy refused to tell him, asking what difference could it possibly make, so he'd spent the long night scrolling back through their marriage, especially the times he'd behaved badly. There'd been a fair number, he had to admit. Had his wife already fallen for Tommy the day she told Griffin she hated jazz? Probably not, but the seed might well have been sown that early."
Reading this was heart wrenching for me. Just imagining what it would feel like to learn your spouse had feelings for your friend/partner, and then trying to figure out when they actually began the betrayal. Why doesn't Joy understand how not knowing when, will only cause Jack more distress? It may not matter to her, but it matters to him. It could save him the anguish of imagining the when. Joy does not fight fair here.
Platonic or not, Tommy and Joy had feelings that were of the mind and heart, and that is a betrayal to not only her marriage, but to the friendship Tommy had with Jack. Yes, the partnership worked well for both of them, but.....does that excuse the betrayal? Jack may have resented the fact that Joy seemed to find her happiness, she did get what she wanted, and she seemed to leave him on the outside. He felt it when Laura hugged him differently, when Joy calls Laura and seems to be so very happy, yet goes back to being glum with him, when she gave a toast with little regard for him being a screen writer, when she refers to "MY LIFE" instead of our life, when she tells him he has never been happy, and he responds, "I was happy last night."
I like how Russo addresses this, pg.204 "If he had a few secrets about the phone calls to his agent and conversations with his dean, what about the whopper she'd been keeping all these years? He wasn't the one who'd fallen in love with someboy else; she had." Again, Joy is quick to point out Jack's secrets and seem hurt, yet she has not been honest herself.
I suppose depending on your own personal experiences in life, each of us will see Jack and Joy, and their marriage through different glasses. Being happily married for thirty eight years and knowing the ups and downs, the struggles, the times you give in, the times you get your own way, the family dynamics and interferences of the in laws, etc., etc., you learn marriage is not a given of always being happy. It's like the yen and yang of life. That is why in our marriage vows it is sickness and health, good times and bad, richer or poorer. So throughout this book, I have not seen a deal breaker up until now. But then again, I am speaking from my own personal feelings. Adultery would be a deal breaker for me. For me, adultery is not only considered of the body, it can be of the mind and heart and be as destructive to a marriage.
For those who do not have the same printed edition as mine, forgive me for using page numbers. I use the page numbers for my sake of keeping track of where things happened in my book.