Tags: reviews weiner books february 2008
Published : 2 months, 2 weeks ago (Thu, 18 Sep 2008 06:46:36 PDT) Searched: february 2008 http://beebarf.livejournal.com/337871.html 0 links Related posts
Amazon.com Goodnight Nobody is bestselling author Jennifer Weiner's attempt at writing a mystery, with a healthy dose of the author's chick lit sensibilities thrown in for good measure. While this Desperate Housewives meets Sex in the City murder mystery won't make readers shake in their Manolo Blahniks, it will provide the obligatory humor and compassion to which fans of Weiner's Good in Bed, In Her Shoes, and Little Earthquakes have grown accustomed. Kate Klein is a feisty, charmingly insecure Connecticut housewife who trades in a life of late-night karaoke sing-a-longs and West Village brunches with her best friend Janie for a world of mini-vans and Mommy and Me pilates classes. Life in Upchurch, Connecticut, heats up when Kate discovers picture-perfect wife and mother Kitty Cavanaugh dead on the pickled maple hardwood floor of her recently remodeled kitchen. A former chronicler of celebrity gossip, Kate takes it upon herself to solve the mystery of Kitty's murder and the disappearance of Lexi Hagen-Holdt, another Upchurch supermom. Along the way, the mysteries and disappointments in Kate's personal life begin to unravel, including her marriage to the kind-yet-uptight Ben, and her unresolved crush on Evan McKenna, a former neighbor with whom a one-night tryst ended in disaster. Thrown in for comic relief, and perhaps to show the depth of Weiner's talents as a writer, are Kate's twin boys and adorably sophisticated 5-year old daughter Sophie ("Sophie was sitting on the toilet, applying lipstick and waiting her turn..."). Goodnight Nobody is chock full of plot twists and turns which can be overwhelming and superfluous. However, Weiner's charm and grace are usually enough to rescue readers from these moments of confusion, and reaffirm our commitment to this endearing contemporary voice. --Gisele Toueg
Insecure women with husbands who are in some way dysfunctional bug me. Change the situation and quit whining, why don't you? If my partner decided to move the family without consultation, he'd be moving on his own ... but that wouldn't make a novel, would it?
This was a bit of an odd one - it couldn't decide whether to be standard 'married chick lit who sees live over the fence as greener' or a mystery novel a la Stephanie Plum or Kinsey Millhone and in the end, it was neither. It wasn't a bad book, but it was nothing special either. It would be a good book to read on a flight or when sick, as it wasn't very demanding.
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