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NANTUCKET NIGHTS

One hates to see Kayla, a good Nantucketer, take it on the chin like this. But, well, for a good story? Hey.

Follow-up to Hilderbrand’s debut, The Beach Club (2000), that summons up stronger plotting but is still sheer as a see-through bikini.

Hilderbrand’s steady flow of island detail impresses as a kind of consumer’s guide to Nantucket even as one’s hunger deepens for a Bret Eaton Ellis psycho amid the glitter or even an ax-wielding Russian student of Nietzsche out to murder a Monomoy millionaire. Can one really read 200-plus pages of this chicken salad? Three women in their 40s have met for 19 years on the Friday of Labor Day weekend for moonlit Champagne-and-lobster-tails, all-night nude swim, and heartfest. Kayla Montero, with four kids, fights her weight while married to her gorgeously handsome Brazilian husband, Raoul, a contractor with a ten-million-dollar house to build—and quite possibly mistresses to service. Antoinette Riley, who has been “having crazy sex,” is “dark-skinned like an Egyptian priestess” and has “the sexiest voice on the planet. . . dark and exotic, like sandalwood, like expensive chocolate.” A daughter, Lindsey, “the color of a wine cork” and given up for adoption as a baby, has tracked Antoinette (who has $30 million from Microsoft investments) down and wants to meet her the day after the swim party. Married Valerie Gluckstern, Nantucket’s top lawyer, has been having an affair “with someone they all know” and will tell all at the swim. Valerie brings a Methuselah of Laurent-Perrier Champagne to the swim, Antoinette a tub of lobster tails, Kayla a quart of raspberries and pale creamy Saint André cheese. Then Antoinette swims out, never returning. Police, coast guard, no Antoinette. Next day Kayla meets Lindsey, gives her the bad news, escorts her about. As it happens, Antoinette was pregnant by Kayla’s 18-year-old son, Theo! From there, everything dips deep into Peyton Place country, with Kayla turning adulteress as the muck rises.

One hates to see Kayla, a good Nantucketer, take it on the chin like this. But, well, for a good story? Hey.

Pub Date: June 1, 2001

ISBN: 0-312-28335-0

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Dunne/St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2002

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WHERE THE LIGHT ENTERS

Detectives, doctors, and dastardly scoundrels abound in this fascinating historical novel.

Luring women with the false promise of a safe, albeit illegal, abortion, a serial killer is on the loose in 1880s New York City.

In this sequel to The Gilded Hour (2015), Donati returns to a time when female doctors were viewed with surprise if not outright hostility. Cousins Anna and Sophie Savard have earned their professional medical training, both turning to practice primarily on women. Grieving the recent death of her attorney husband, Cap, from tuberculosis, Sophie plans to use her inheritance to establish scholarships and a welcoming home for women pursuing medical studies. Happily married to Jack Mezzanotte, a detective investigating the killings with his partner, Oscar Maroney, Anna is a highly accomplished surgeon, but they have just lost custody of the children they were fostering, children the church wants raised by Catholics. The sprawling Savard family blends multiple ethnicities, including Italian, Mohawk, and African American, and Donati crafts strong female characters who draw upon the wisdom of their ancestors to transcend the slings and arrows of petty racism and sexism. She juxtaposes these women, thriving on the energies of the zeitgeist advancing women’s rights, with the villains, who sink into the muck of dubious morality crusades, such as the anti-contraception and anti-abortion campaigns of Anthony Comstock and the xenophobic orphanage system run by the Roman Catholic Church. Through Sophie’s and Anna’s work, Donati sketches in the historical backdrop of reproductive challenges in late-19th-century America: Women dying in childbirth, women dying to avoid childbirth, women and babies mangled by medical quacks, and children drugged to the point of death just to keep peace in the nursery. The wounds inflicted by the serial killer caused prolonged, severely painful deaths, suggesting not inept but malicious intent. And as the Drs. Savard assist Jack and Oscar in their investigation, another woman goes missing.

Detectives, doctors, and dastardly scoundrels abound in this fascinating historical novel.

Pub Date: Sept. 10, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-425-27182-7

Page Count: 672

Publisher: Berkley

Review Posted Online: June 16, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2019

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BIG STONE GAP

The Dukes of Hazzard written as if it were a homiletic drama.

An irritatingly hokey, inept attempt to invade Fannie Flagg territory.

Ave Maria Mulligan, a pharmacist in Big Stone Gap, discovers she has a long-lost Italian father, saves Elizabeth Taylor from choking on a chicken wing, and follows her friend Iva Lou's advice and gets her a workingman. It's 1978, and Ave Maria's mother has passed away, leaving a letter stating that mean old Fred Mulligan wasn't her daughter’s real father. It's unclear why Mama never told anyone, but Ave Maria's father is Mario Barbari, a boy she knew back in Bergamo. Iva Lou Wade—a promiscuous, worldly-wise woman who calls everyone “honey-o” or “sweetie-o”—drives the Bookmobile. She finds a book on Bergamo that just happens to have a picture of Mario. Ave Maria, who ruminates incessantly, is reeling from all this news and, in a truly bizarre move, sells her pharmacy—for one dollar—to Pearl Grimes, a poor, overweight teenaged girl she'd recently hired. Meanwhile, Ave Maria lusts after the high-school band director, who initially spurns her. She, in turn, is the object of Jack Mac's affection, though he proposed to someone else on stage on the closing night of the Outdoor Drama, which Ave Maria directs. Ave Maria is also a member of the rescue squad and, when Elizabeth Taylor comes to town with her husband, senatorial candidate John Warner, to attend a high-school football game, she helps the choking actress get to the hospital. To add insult to cornball, the blushing, bumbling Jack Mac woos a surprised Ave Maria by selling his precious pickup truck to pay for her father and aunts to come to America. The couple will wed and name their child Fiametta Bluebell. Trigiani lacks subtlety, and the fun is lost in the desire to be taken seriously.

The Dukes of Hazzard written as if it were a homiletic drama.

Pub Date: April 4, 2000

ISBN: 0-375-50403-6

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2000

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