The Virgin Suicides

by Jeffrey Eugenides
Lux is the second-youngest Lisbon sister. At just 14, she’s considered the most desirable sister by the neighborhood boys, who keep especially close tabs on her. Lux is also the most adventurous sister, frequently breaking household rules to sneak out with boys. Her parents are opposed to their daughters dating in high school, so she’s forced to keep her romantic liaisons secret, though the neighborhood boys know surprisingly a lot about her love life. However, the only person they talk to who has an actual romantic relationship with Lux is Trip Fontaine, who—even decades later—is reluctant to reveal too much. Nonetheless, Trip tells the boys the story of him and Lux sneaking off together after the homecoming dance—a story that ends with them having sex on the football field before Trip abandons her there, leaving her with no option but to take a taxi home. Her parents are furious, and so begins the period in which the Lisbon sisters are hardly allowed out of the house. During this time, Lux sneaks a number of guys (including several full-on adults) into the house and onto the roof, where she has sex with them while, unbeknownst to her, the neighborhood boys watch from afar. By the end of the novel, Lux has lost a concerning amount of weight, which adds to the overall sense that the sisters are unwell. On the night of her and her sisters’ group suicide, she distracts the boys by starting to unbuckle Chase Buell’s pants, allowing her other sisters time to go through with their suicide attempts. She then goes to the garage and asphyxiates herself in her parents’ car.

Lux Lisbon Quotes in The Virgin Suicides

The The Virgin Suicides quotes below are all either spoken by Lux Lisbon or refer to Lux Lisbon. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
).

Chapter 1 Quotes

The paneled walls gleamed, and for the first few seconds the Lisbon girls were only a patch of glare like a congregation of angels. Then, however, our eyes got used to the light and informed us of something we had never realized: the Lisbon girls were all different people. Instead of five replicas with the same blond hair and puffy cheeks we saw that they were distinct beings, their personalities beginning to transform their faces and reroute their expressions.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Therese Lisbon, Mary Lisbon, Cecilia Lisbon, Lux Lisbon, Bonnie Lisbon
Page Number and Citation: 23
Explanation and Analysis:

Chapter 4 Quotes

Years later, when we lost our own virginities, we resorted in our panic to pantomiming Lux’s gyrations on the roof so long ago; and even now, if we were to be honest with ourselves, we would have to admit that it is always that pale wraith we make love to, always her feet snagged in the gutter, always her single blooming hand steadying itself against the chimney, no matter what our present lovers’ feet and hands are doing.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Lux Lisbon
Page Number and Citation: 141-142
Explanation and Analysis:

It was crazy to make love on the roof at any time, but to make love on the roof in winter suggested derangement, desperation, self-destructiveness far in excess of any pleasure snatched beneath the dripping trees. Though some of us saw Lux as a force of nature, impervious to chill, an ice goddess generated by the season itself, the majority knew she was only a girl in danger, or in pursuit, of catching her death of cold.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Lux Lisbon
Page Number and Citation: 144
Explanation and Analysis:

It was from Ms. Angelica Turnette, a hospital clerical worker, that we later received the documents that we hold among our most prized possessions (her nonunion pay hardly made ends meet). The doctor’s report, in a series of titillating numbers, presents Lux in a stiff paper gown stepping on the scale (99), opening her. mouth for the thermometer (98.7), and urinating into a plastic cup (WBC 6-8 occ. Clump; mucus heavy; leukocytes 2+). The simple appraisal “mild abrasions” reports the condition of her uterine walls, and in an advancement that has since been discontinued, a photograph was taken of her rosy cervix, which looks like a camera shutter set on an extremely low exposure. (It stares at us now like an inflamed eye, fixing us with its silent accusation.)

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Lux Lisbon
Page Number and Citation: 150
Explanation and Analysis:

As it circulated in the next few months, this theory convinced many people because it simplified things. Already Cecilia’s suicide had assumed in retrospect the stature of a long-prophesied event. Nobody thought it shocking anymore, and accepting it as First Cause removed any need for further explanation. […] Her suicide, from this perspective, was seen as a kind of disease infecting those close at hand.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Dr. Hornicker, Lux Lisbon, Cecilia Lisbon
Related Literary Devices:
Page Number and Citation: 153
Explanation and Analysis:

Thinking back, we decided the girls had been trying to talk to us all along, to elicit our help, but we’d been too infatuated to listen. Our surveillance had been so focused we missed nothing but a simple returned gaze. Who else did they have to turn to? Not their parents. Nor the neighborhood. Inside their house they were prisoners; outside, lepers. And so they hid from the world, waiting for someone—for us—to save them.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Mary Lisbon, Therese Lisbon, Bonnie Lisbon, Lux Lisbon
Page Number and Citation: 193
Explanation and Analysis:

We climbed up to the tree house the way we always had, stepping in the knothole, then on the nailed board, then on two bent nails, before grasping the frayed rope and pulling ourselves through the trapdoor. We were so much bigger now we could barely squeeze through, and once we were inside, the plywood floor sagged under our weight. The oblong window we’d cut with a handsaw years ago still looked onto the front of the Lisbon house. Next to it were rusty tacks. We didn’t remember putting them up, but there they were, dim from time and weather so that all we could make out were the phosphorescent outlines of the girls’ bodies, each a different glowing letter of an unknown alphabet.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Therese Lisbon, Bonnie Lisbon, Mary Lisbon, Cecilia Lisbon, Lux Lisbon
Related Symbols: Elm Trees and the Lisbon House
Page Number and Citation: 196-197
Explanation and Analysis:

It took a minute to sink in. We gazed up at Bonnie, at her spindly legs in their white confirmation stockings, and the shame that has never gone away took over. The doctors we later consulted attributed our response to shock. But the mood felt more like guilt, like coming to attention at the last moment and too late, as though Bonnie were murmuring the secret not only of her death but of her life itself, of all the girls’ lives.

Related Characters: The Neighborhood Boys (speaker), Bonnie Lisbon, Lux Lisbon
Page Number and Citation: 209-210
Explanation and Analysis:
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Lux Lisbon Character Timeline in The Virgin Suicides

The timeline below shows where the character Lux Lisbon appears in The Virgin Suicides. The colored dots and icons indicate which themes are associated with that appearance.
Chapter 1
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...Lisbon are both away when Cecilia cuts her wrists in the bathtub, but Mary and Lux are in the neighborhood. They come running home and enter the bathroom to see their... (full context)
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
There are five Lisbon sisters: Cecilia is 13, Lux is 14, Bonnie is 15, Mary is 16, and Therese is 17. The boys don’t... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
...out and bring it to the other boys, thinking it’s actually quite beautiful. But then Lux knocks on the door, and he guesses by her eagerness to get into the bathroom... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
...on, things change at the Lisbon household. The boys find that they can regularly spot Lux sunbathing in the front lawn. Mr. and Mrs. Lisbon even allow the boy who cuts... (full context)
Chapter 3
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
The boys keep tabs on the Lisbon girls. Rumors circulate about Lux going off with boys she meets on the boardwalk—whom the neighborhood boys don’t know—and not... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Lux starts sneaking around with multiple different boys, though not—it seems—with anyone included in the chorus... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
There is one boy, however, who gets to know Lux better than anyone else. His name is Trip Fontaine, and though the neighborhood boys have... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
When Trip takes an interest in Lux Lisbon, he doesn’t know what to do—girls usually pursue him. But Lux doesn’t pay him... (full context)
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Trip spends the ensuing weeks trying to get Lux’s attention, even consulting his father and his father’s boyfriend. Finally, he decides to wait for... (full context)
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...follows through with his plan. When he arrives at the Lisbon house, it’s clear that Lux has prepared her parents for his arrival. But the evening is uneventful. The entire family... (full context)
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Going to his car, Trip sits in disappointment without driving away—until, suddenly, Lux jumps into the car, straddles him, and seems to attack him with her mouth, kissing... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
The next time Trip tries to make a date with Lux to watch television, she says she’s grounded, though nobody knows why. As the months stretch... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...school counselor on a regular basis. They seem to connect with her—she even smokes with Lux, breaking school rules. The neighborhood boys notice a marked improvement in the way the sisters... (full context)
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Trip goes straight to Mr. Lisbon’s classroom and announces that he wants to take Lux to the homecoming dance. Mr. Lisbon tells him to sit and then calmly explains that... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...their bodies as possible. As the girls and their dates roll up to the dance, Lux announces that she wants to have a cigarette before they go in. Her sisters complain... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Under the bleachers, Trip pulls out a fifth of peach schnapps. He offers it to Lux, telling her not to swallow—you have to taste it, he says, through a kiss. He... (full context)
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
At the end of the dance, the Lisbon girls try to find Lux and Trip, but they can’t. Parkie Denton suggests that maybe they went home with Mr.... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Lux doesn’t come back until late that night, rolling up in a taxi. Uncle Tucker—a neighborhood... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...from alcohol, the neighborhood boys learn what happened that night. Trip explains that he and Lux snuck away at the end of the dance and lay down on the football field,... (full context)
Chapter 4
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
During this period, Mrs. Lisbon also forces Lux to burn all of her rock and roll records. Lux is devastated, but Mrs. Lisbon... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
The partners Lux brings onto the roof are mysterious—nobody knows how she meets them, since she never leaves... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
Around the time Lux starts having sex on the roof, the boys notice how frail she has started to... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
Not much later, though, the boys hear the real story about why Lux went to the hospital. Once she gets out of the waiting room, she mostly stops... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
The doctor ends up telling Mr. and Mrs. Lisbon that Lux just had really bad indigestion. Privately, he relieves Lux by informing her that she’s not... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
Dr. Hornicker, who briefly had the chance to talk to Lux while she waited for the results of her gynecological exam, sets forth a new theory:... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...girls are communicating with them in other ways, too. At night, a Chinese lantern in Lux’s room blinks on and off in what they think is Morse code, though they’re unable... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...the Lisbon house using a telescope. Every once in a while they catch sight of Lux in her bedroom, but the telescope image is too magnified for them to discern what... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
...realize they’re peering beyond a windowsill of dead houseplants and into the living room, where Lux is absently smoking a cigarette in a beanbag chair. The boys recognize the halter top... (full context)
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
...load the Lisbon girls in and drive away. It’ll be a tight fit, though. But Lux doesn’t mind, simply asking, “Which one of you studs is going to sit up front... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
Lux points out that not everyone will fit in Chase Buell’s car, so they should probably... (full context)
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
Lux tells the boys to wait for her sisters, who will need help with their luggage.... (full context)
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...have been dead, having swallowed a handful of sleeping pills and chased it with gin. Lux, the boys put together, died after they left the house running and screaming—they forgot to... (full context)
Chapter 5
Obsession, Gossip, and Scandal Theme Icon
Coming of Age and Nostalgia Theme Icon
Suburban Life, Class, and Decline Theme Icon
Loss, Mourning, and Uncertainty Theme Icon
...in the neighborhood. But even the items themselves are perishing: the fabric of one of Lux’s bras going stiff, a pair of Cecilia’s canvas sneakers yellowing. These are the only puzzle... (full context)