A Wisconsin-born New York City transplant sets out to find herself after her divorce.
Sunny Greene holds two simultaneous truths in her mind. She’s devastated that her husband, Zack, has left her, and she’s absolutely certain that he was cheating on her. She’s successful by most metrics—she runs a boutique PR company that is doing extremely well; she lives in Chelsea, her dream neighborhood, where she has a six-block walk to work with her two dogs, Sophia and Blanche. But she still feels in pieces over the divorce, despite all the negative commentary that Zack used to pour on her. With her close friends Brooke and Noor—both also recently divorced—she sets out to discover her successful future. But while getting ready for her and her friends’ “divorcation,” Sunny impulsively decides to try on a swimsuit at Bergdorf Goodman, an adventure that goes terribly wrong when she gets stuck in it. After the resulting panic attack has ended (and a little time has passed), she realizes she has to embrace the person she is. All 5-foot-11, 275 pounds, 35 years of herself. She restarts a newsletter she stopped writing because Zack found it embarrassing; she embraces body neutrality (as she describes it: “Yes I have cellulite, okay—moving on”); and she begins going after what she really wants. When it comes to dating, she’s torn between Ted, a financier, and Dennis, a down-to-earth mailman. And she puts in the hours and effort to turn that ill-fated experience in the changing room into a new business. The novel has a straightforward agenda and the author doesn’t shy away from making it clear at every turn: Hard work and a belief in yourself will result in success in every endeavor, despite bumps in the road.
A novel that offers a character unafraid to embrace who she is: smart, sassy, driven, cheerful—and plus size.