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Ask Me Anything: A Novel
 
 
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Ask Me Anything: A Novel [Paperback]

Francesca Delbanco (Author)
3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)

Price: $13.95 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details
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Book Description

February 17, 2005

"An engaging, screwball first novel....A genuine pleasure."—The New Yorker

Twenty-six-year-old Rosalie Preston works by day as an advice columnist for the romantically perplexed readership of Girl Talk magazine. But her true passion is for the stage and for her fledgling theater troupe, the First Borns, a tight pack of friends and lovers who live (mostly) in the East Village. When Rosalie comes to the notice of suave Berglan Starker, a theater underwriter—and also the father of her best friend—she finds herself caught up in a very different affair from those she so jauntily untangles in her column for teens. Struggling to be savvy but sage, she is swept along by curiosity, a taste for adventure, and a penchant for those alluring complimentary toiletries in New York's ritziest hotels. Fame versus art, sex versus love, ambition versus friendship, room service versus restaurants: these are the choppy waters the First Borners must navigate—together and, perhaps ultimately, apart—in this delicious novel.

"The best of what the chick-lit genre has to offer: it's wry, compelling, and keenly observed."—Library Journal "What a delightful surprise....[Delbanco's] voice is fresh and wise....The angst here is warm and funny and has the true tone of excited urgency and humility that fuels youth."—Mary Ambrose, Boston Globe "Absurdly entertaining....The wistful and wise-cracking Rosalie is a winning screwball heroine."—Mark Rozzo, Los Angeles Times Book Review

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Ambition and romance collide in Delbanco's uneven debut about an aspiring actress who comes to New York to discover what and whom she really, really wants and how to live with the choices she makes. Rosalie Preston works by day as a GirlTalk columnist doling out sensible advice to lovelorn teens, signing her replies with the arch, "Trust me. I've lived through it." She's still on the learning curve, though, as she struggles to know her own heart. Is it in the acting she does with the First Borns, a small, tight-knit troupe formed while the members were still in college? Or will she find it in romance? The troupe begins to fragment as member Evan is promoted by his boss, one of Broadway's top directors, to help launch a play written by Declan Pearse, a gifted Irish playwright, that will showcase Cam, one of First Born's most talented actors. Soon two other members announce their engagement, leaving Rosalie feeling further out of the loop and ripe for a secret affair with the famous financier Berglan Starker, who's not only the primary bankroller of the troupe but another member's father. Delbanco, a former Seventeen advice columnist, cleverly frames the chapters of her late bloomer's coming-of-age with samples of Rosalie's light "Ask Annie" columns. Unfortunately, these breezy clips are sometimes more entertaining than the heavier narration of Delbanco's self-absorbed protagonist, whose observations alternate between witty "Edginess is a pheromone; it has physical manifestations" to the less assured and gooey "His kiss was so silvery that every inch of my body melted and my shoes slipped right off me onto the floor" as Rosalie finds the balance between career and love that Delbanco, who shows potential as a prose stylist, hopefully will find in her next novel.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From The New Yorker

At the start of this engaging, screwball first novel, Rosalie Preston, a fledgling Manhattanite a few years out of Harvard, works as the advice columnist for GirlTalk, a teen magazine (her signoff is "Trust me. I've lived through it"). But in her off hours she's a member of the First Born Company, an earnest acting troupe that comprises all of her arty college friends. Delbanco catches perfectly that murky moment when perpetual adolescents, bound to each other at the hip, turn into grownups with more complicated loyalties—a process that is hastened somewhat when the heroine is bedded by a pal's urbane father—but she is sensible enough to wear her insights lightly. Rosalie's romantic misadventures form an ironic counterpoint to the advice chirpily imparted by her columns. Such sureness of touch turns a story that might have seemed hackneyed into a genuine pleasure.
Copyright © 2005 The New Yorker

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company (February 17, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0393326462
  • ISBN-13: 978-0393326468
  • Product Dimensions: 8.3 x 5.3 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 10.6 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (11 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,427,482 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

11 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (4)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.5 out of 5 stars (11 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars perfect prose, troubled youths, May 13, 2004
Man did I love reading this novel of an teen advice columnist and would-be actress who feels, at age 26, like the world is nailing parts and coupling up and generally leaving her behind. Rosalie, our heroine, sure knows wry inner thought, and Delbanco, our author, sure knows how to write jokey banter among twentysomethings. So I laughed a lot as I tore through the book, except when every so often I hit an applause-worthy bon mot, when I'd screech to a halt and mentally vow to rave review this thing on Amazon.

Where it appears not everyone has loved the book as much as me. Maybe some people found Rosalie tough to like. But there too, I thought Delbanco successfully walked a fine line: I rooted for her. Even though she was a homewrecker. And, occasionally the shatterer of dreams of teenage girls. Details, people! I say Rosalie was pure of heart in spite of it all.

There's lots of plot, too! Good, real world plot! Affairs, and shows, and marriages, and even visits to the parents. Was there too much plot? I kind of thought the ending (happy - somebody gives it away on the back cover, so don't blame me) just kept happening, in a number of different locales. Yeesh. Pull the cord already.

But really - overall, I totally dug it. Am def gonna read the next one. Hope her publishers put out the paperback with a pink cover - because I think Ask Me Anything should be widely read.

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7 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Captured the angst of life changes, January 23, 2005
I stumbled upon this book at the library, and decided to read it because it was set in New York. I was pleasantly surprised at how delightful this book was. Rosalie was a character that grew on me, the more I read , the more I understood her and what the author was trying to convey.
Even though I am past my 20's ( thank fully!) the issues Rosalie was struggling with overlap into all stages of life, the basic questions of change and how to cope with them. Of how unexpected things occur in life and what do they mean or where do they lead.
Some parts of the story were overlong, but I was entertained and pulled along. Francesca is a talented writer who excels at interesting dialog and witty humor. Her descriptions of Declan were priceless. She created speech patterns for each character that defined them well. I am looking forward to reading other work from her.
If you want to read a sweet story with a unique female lead, if you want to follow the twists of relationships, if you want to feel like you are in New York hanging with actors, and if you want to feel you are not alone when the changes in your own life might puzzle or sadden you....this is a worthwhile and uplifting story.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars She lived through it, March 7, 2004
It's hard to beat earnestness. And Francesco Delbanco's debut novel "Ask Me Anything" is pretty darn earnest. While it suffers from some awkwardness typical of new authors, Delbanco has a good grip on what makes a tight, optimistic light book.
Rosalie is a familiar sort of character to chick-lit readers: Mid-twenties, aspiring actress, has guy troubles, confused, busy but with plenty of time to hang out with pals. But she's a bit different at heart, more contemplative and confident. Her day job is as an advice columnist for a fluffy girl magazine, GirlTalk, giving nuggets of wisdom to angsty teenagers.

But the "Annie Answers" job is merely to support her way in a theatre troupe, First Borns, made up of rich kids, weirdos and sometime boyfriends. Rosalie is confronted with choices about her future and her heart: When other members of the First Borns start to get engaged, she finds herself falling into an affair with a fellow member's slick daddy.

Genuinely ordinary lead characters are a rarity. And Delbanco keeps a hand firmly in "normal" turf while dabbling in the lives of the rich'n'glamorous of Manhatten. Rosalie is no spoiled rich kid. In fact, her style of living, brushing elbows with that of her wealthier friends, is pretty normal by comparison, and she isn't as preoccupied with designer stilettoes and trends as you'd expect. It offers no new insights about the present generation of young single women, but then, it never claimed to. Nor does it seem to try.

Delbanco's writing is solid and nicely detailed, without the strained I-must-be-witty air of many similar books. Dialogue is her stumbling block; it's too contrived and self-conscious. She needs to just relax and let the words flow. At times it also gets a bit gooey and cliched, even bordering on an "Amelie"-esque romance novel in one kissy scene. And one would expect the little advice-column snippets to get a little too cute -- but they don't.

Rosalie's a nice lead character. She lacks scruples in places (hello, the guy is MARRIED), but her ordinary looks and soul-searching keep her interesting to Everygirl. She also has a bit of an inferiority complex that crops up from time to time, but it (thankfully) never turns into a neurosis. The supporting characters such as the suave playboy Berglan and likably weird Jake, are nicely drawn.

"Ask Me Anything" is a pleasant read, even for the non-chick-lit readers. It offers nothing new on the life of urban single gals, but is a nice light read.
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
In the northeastern reaches of the Adirondacks, halfway between Tupper Lake and Saranac, lies a large private property called the Fort Sassquam Association. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
advice columnist
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Berglan Starker, New York, Francesca Delbanco, Dame Street, Girl Talk, First Born, Declan Pearse, Fort Sassquam, Adele Goldberg, Manny Flax, Mary Tyrone, Last Winter, Pearl Coleman, Annie Answers, William Howlitt Smith, Fifth Avenue, Footlights Festival, Madison Avenue, Brooks Starker, Eugene O'Neill, Hoyt-Purvis Gallery, Mother Elizabeth, New England, New World, Rosalie Preston
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