by Terry McMillan ‧ RELEASE DATE: March 31, 2020
If only things went so well in real life! Enjoy the wish fulfillment of ready cash and ideal outcomes.
A close-knit group of 60-something black women deals with loss, illness, addicted family members, and the never-ending challenges of diet and exercise.
In her 10th novel, McMillan (I Almost Forgot About You, 2016, etc.) joins long-career novelists such as Philip Roth and Anne Tyler as she sails her protagonists with her into older age. Southern California beauty supply mogul Loretha Curry is about to celebrate her 68th birthday with her doting, still-hot third husband, and she begins by watching the DVD of her 67th. Here we meet her gal pals: Sadie, the church lady who might be a lesbian; Korynthia, the gorgeous 6-foot-1-inch-tall exercise instructor; Lucky, married to a white architect and with a weight problem like Loretha’s; and Poochie, a cruise-loving widow rolling in dough, now living in Las Vegas to care for her ailing mother. Loretha has told Carl that she’s sick of parties, so the dear man surprises her with a weekend at a favorite Palm Springs resort, where less happy surprises await. Speaking of hot husbands and hotel rooms, the little blue pill plays a humorous role throughout the novel, which is sprinkled with comments like “And he knows how to take just the right amount of Viagra, not like Mr. Roto-Rooter.” After Loretha’s world takes a devastating hit in Chapter 1, all her problems become much more pressing. She’s completely alienated from her twin sister and her alcoholic daughter; her son lives in Japan, and she’s never met her grandkids; her 86-year-old mother is eager to leave the nursing home; many people in her life need money and plan to get it from her. With all this pressure, it's no wonder Loretha’s ignoring her diabetes diagnosis and putting on pounds like crazy, and the only exercise she gets is walking her dog, B.B. King.
If only things went so well in real life! Enjoy the wish fulfillment of ready cash and ideal outcomes.Pub Date: March 31, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-9848-2374-8
Page Count: 368
Publisher: Ballantine
Review Posted Online: Oct. 27, 2019
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2019
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by T. Greenwood ‧ RELEASE DATE: Jan. 1, 2009
Overwrought context obscures a sweetly told love story.
Ghosts of his heartbreaking past visit a railroad worker in rural New England.
A life marked by tragedy is the cornerstone of this Northern Gothic by Greenwood (Undressing the Moon, 2002, etc.). Narrator Harper Montgomery is a gloomy figure, beset by melancholy and struggling to raise his young daughter Shelly in a cracker-box apartment in the small town where he’s lived most of his life. He’s haunted, not only by the horrific wreck that killed his wife Betsy 12 years earlier, in 1968, but also by his involvement in a brutal crime referred to fleetingly in cryptic bridging segments. Harper’s dismal life working at the freight office of the railroad station in Two Rivers, Vt., is interrupted by a terrible train crash. From the wreckage, Harper rescues a pregnant adolescent, “a girl with skin the color of blackberries,” and takes her into his home against his better instincts. The terrified girl calls herself Marguerite Dufresne and claims to be fleeing to Canada after being raped in her Southern hometown. From this bleak starting point, Greenwood knits a densely woven sequence of events that finds Harper recounting his love affair with Betsy Parker throughout the ’60s as well as the startling (and often implausible) misfortunes that befall their families, including the suicide of Betsy’s mentally ill mother and a fire that devastates Harper’s family. Along the way, he unravels the mystery of Marguerite’s origins and begs forgiveness for the long-ago racial violation that spurred the suicide of one of Harper’s childhood friends. Greenwood’s novel features a satisfyingly complex romance and admirable storytelling momentum, but its fractured swing between passion and heartbreak make it a tough read. By the time the syrupy finale rolls around, the woebegone plight of its pitiful narrator has grown tedious.
Overwrought context obscures a sweetly told love story.Pub Date: Jan. 1, 2009
ISBN: 978-0-7582-2877-2
Page Count: 352
Publisher: Kensington
Review Posted Online: May 19, 2010
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2008
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by Anissa Gray ‧ RELEASE DATE: Feb. 19, 2019
A deep dive into the shifting alliances and betrayals among siblings.
In this debut novel, three adult sisters confront their family’s dark and fractured past while searching for a way forward amid myriad challenges including prison time, eating disorders, and long-buried secrets.
Growing up, the Butler children—Althea, Viola, Joe, and Lillian—had it rough. When their mother died young and their abusive preacher father hit the road for months at a time, it fell to 12-year-old Althea and her friend Proctor, who would eventually become her husband, to raise her siblings. The story opens in the present day, with now middle-aged Althea and Proctor in jail awaiting sentencing for committing fraud and stealing from both the federal government and fellow citizens of their small Michigan town, where they were restaurateurs and community organizers. The couple’s twin teenage daughters, Kim and Baby Vi, are living with Lillian, struggling with the aftermath of their parents’ crimes and demons of their own. Gray, a journalist, shares biographical similarities with her characters: Like the Butlers, Gray is black and grew up in a predominantly white Michigan town, the daughter of a preacher. And like Viola, Gray is gay and in recovery from bulimia. When Viola, on her way back to Michigan from her apartment in Chicago for Althea's sentencing, holes up in a motel room gorging on junk food and vomiting, Gray’s descriptions of the binge-and-purge cycle are particularly visceral: “While I wait for the toilet to collect itself for another flush, I go to the sink, still feeling light as air. Still enjoying the fuzzy, white-noise sense of calm. Xanax couldn’t make me feel any mellower, I don’t think.” Gray manages a large cast of characters with ease, sharply differentiating between the voices of hardheaded Althea, shrewd Viola, and hesitating Lillian, who narrate the novel in alternating chapters. Scenes of Althea attending Bible study in jail and grappling with her faith tend to drag and read as extraneous to the more pressing family dramas at hand.
A deep dive into the shifting alliances and betrayals among siblings.Pub Date: Feb. 19, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-984-80243-9
Page Count: 304
Publisher: Berkley
Review Posted Online: Nov. 25, 2018
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 15, 2018
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