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Literacy and Longing in L.A. [Paperback]

Jennifer Kaufman (Author), Karen Mack (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 29, 2007
Some women shop. Some eat. Dora cures the blues by bingeing on books—reading one after another, from Flaubert to bodice rippers, for hours and days on end. In this wickedly funny and sexy literary debut, we meet the beguiling, beautiful Dora, whose unique voice combines a wry wit and vulnerability as she navigates the road between reality and fiction.

Dora, named after Eudora Welty, is an indiscriminate book junkie whose life has fallen apart—her career, her marriage, and finally her self-esteem. All she has left is her love of literature, and the book benders she relied on as a child. Ever since her larger-than-life father wandered away and her book-loving, alcoholic mother was left with two young daughters, Dora and her sister, Virginia, have clung to each other, enduring a childhood filled with literary pilgrimages instead of summer vacations. Somewhere along the way Virginia made the leap into the real world. But Dora isn’t quite there yet. Now she’s coping with a painful separation from her husband, scraping the bottom of a dwindling inheritance, and attracted to a seductive book-seller who seems to embody all that literature has to offer—intelligent ideas, romance, and an escape from her problems.

Joining Dora in her odyssey is an elderly society hair-brusher, a heartbroken young girl, a hilarious off-the-wall female teamster, and Dora’s mother, now on the wagon, trying to make amends. Along the way Dora faces some powerful choices. Between two irresistible men. Between idleness and work. And most of all between the joy of well-chosen words and the untidiness of real people and real life.


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Kaufman, a former L.A. Times staff writer, and Mack, a former attorney and Golden Globe Award– winning film and TV producer, check in with this solid, thoughtful chick lit debut. Dora, at 35, is a twice-divorced former young reporter on the rise at the L.A. Times. Second ex-husband Palmer is now head of Sony Pictures, and still supporting her. Dora's depressed, and she only leaves the house to stalk Palmer and buy more books. At the bookstore, she meets elegantly scraggly comp lit Ph.D. Fred, and they begin an unlikely courtship. Dora is soon surprised by Fred's invitation to meet his mother, Bea, whom Dora likes instantly, all the more so when she learns Bea is also raising Harper, the six-year-old daughter of Fred's troubled sister. The bond between Bea and Dora gives Dora something she never had with her own, alcoholic mother, and helps her make decisions that bring her life back into focus. Dora is the kind of deadpan and imperfect heroine with whom readers can easily identify. Kaufman and Mack mishandle the abrupt ending and epilogue, but are most likely setting up a welcome sequel. (June 6)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

From Booklist

Book lust meets chick lit in this tale of a love-challenged bookworm. Dora, named for Eudora Welty, confesses, "I collect new books the way my girlfriends buy designer handbags." Estranged from her husband and living in a luxurious L.A. high-rise, she deals with melancholy by taking long baths while drinking wine and reading paperbacks. Luckily, her habit must be fed, requiring frequent trips to the local bookstore, where she meets tall, handsome Fred--a starving playwright who ekes out a living by providing book-group recommendations to Brentwood housewives. Soon they're involved in a heated romance, but things begin to sour when Dora meets his family. Then Dora's husband pops up, and confusion creeps in. Dora is a charming character, and readers will appreciate some of her more neurotic tendencies, such as her debilitating fear of driving on freeways. No literary masterpiece, this cowritten debut reads instead like a gossipy e-mail from a witty, intelligent friend. A list of referenced books and authors is included at the end. Emily Cook
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Delta (May 29, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0385340184
  • ISBN-13: 978-0385340182
  • Product Dimensions: 7.5 x 5.1 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (52 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #673,194 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
30 of 36 people found the following review helpful
Excellent May 30, 2006
Format:Hardcover
At first this book kind of turned me off. The main character came across as a snob and I thought this would be yet another chick lit with a snobby heroine.

I am so glad I continued reading. I think what got me really into this book was the descriptions of the main character secluding herself in her house with her books. She would avoid the world and here life by hiding behind her books - I especially love the bathtub scene. This hooked me. Every bibliophile can identify I think.

I also thoroughly identified with the main character trying to explain to her family her love of reading and how it was NOT a hardship to sit home and do it. That she actually preferred doing it than to socializing!!!!!!!!!!!!!! yes!!!!!!!!!!

The writing was intelligent and while, obviously, there was romance, none of it was really over the top or too "sugary".

I thought this was a chick lit with a twist, written with wry humour and intelligence.

BUY IT!!!!!!!!!!!!!and bring on the next book.
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8 of 10 people found the following review helpful
Format:Hardcover
On Saturday, I plowed through Literacy and Longing in LA, a debut novel by Jennifer Kaufman and Karen Mack. To be honest, it is basically chick lit. Good chick lit, but chick lit nonetheless. The protagonist is Dora, named after Eudora Welty, of course. She is a hard-core bibliophile. When life gets her down, she locks herself in her apartment with stacks of literature. She goes on book binges. She takes two-hour baths with a stack of books next to the tub. (People are calling asking if these authors know me.)

The real joy of this novel is Dora's ruminations on books, reading, different categories of readers, book clubs, specific books she's read or is reading. I turned every page wanting to know if I'd read what Dora had, and if I agreed with her assessments. And there were so many quotations I wanted to read aloud to bookish friends. I'll restrict myself to just two here:

"I collect new books the way my girlfriends buy designer handbags. Sometimes, I just like to know I have them and actually reading them is beside the point. Not that I don't eventually end up reading them one by one. I do. But the mere act of buying them makes me happy--the world is more promising, more fulfilling. It's hard to explain, but I feel, somehow, more optimistic. The whole act just cheers me up. "

And here:

"I like stories about lovers, seduction, sex, marriage, violence, murder, dreams, and death, and also stories that focus on the family with all its dysfunction and grief. I love writers who make their women characters independent, smart, and courageous but also passionate and romantic. I love plots about bitter old men and women who turn all soft and mushy for the love of a child. I love writers who focus on women who reach middle age and ask, 'Now what?' or lonely disappointed women who live in suburbia and can't get out, or authors who write about the pain of growing up, searching for identity. But most of all I love books about spontaneous love affairs that go wrong or veer off in uncharted territory. It's the sudden twists of fate that I like and the unexpected outcomes. Doesn't everyone?"

I need to memorize that speech for the next time someone asks me what I like to read!

Dora is far more attractive than any bookish girl I've ever met. She has too much money and has bought into the whole Angelino lifestyle to an alarming degree. Nonetheless, what bibliophile girl could fail to identify with her quest for love in a bookstore? For God's sake, the novel has literary footnotes and a 9 page book list (of references made within the text) at the back. I loved it!
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful
Maybe December 2, 2006
Format:Hardcover
As a former metropolitan journalist who turns to books and the duvet in times of crisis, I couldnt wait to get my chops around this one, but I found it sort of patchy. The heroine's life was somehow unbelievable, what with the the husband who is the head of Sony (not just average Joe who works there) the best friend who is a teamstar, the apparently posh parents, the hokey new best friends who have their house trashed by drug users and quote the Bible.

Run that one by me again?

I cant help wondering if this has got something to do with having two writers: "Hey Jen, lets make the boyfriend...". Ironically, given that the book is about the intimate relationship we readers have with books and their authors, this more film script approach left me feeling disinterested and uninterested.
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
For Those Who Love Narrative
Good books come in all shapes, sizes, genre, and styles. How do you find a good book among all the millions out there? Read the reviews and weigh them against your own preferences. Read more
Published 26 days ago by Rebecca Graf
Reads like a rough draft
"I collect new books the way my girlfriends buy designer handbags."

Despite a main character who could be construed as a kindred spirit, this book disappointed me. Read more
Published 5 months ago by Debnance at Readerbuzz
Fun read for an Angeleno
Maybe others would enjoy it too -- it is particularly descriptive of the intellectual vacuousness of Southern California. The characters were far-fetched. Read more
Published 6 months ago by Captain Leigh
Ridiculous
The best thing about this book is its sleek, sexy cover. It all goes south fast from there. The premise, that reading is wonderful, certainly doesn't come through in this effort. Read more
Published on September 6, 2009 by Joy Stuart
Not for Literati
This book was sub par. It was funny some times, but I felt the plot was weak and the character kind of annoyed me. Read more
Published on July 6, 2009 by E. BRADLEY
Great book if you love, well... books!!
I read this book over the weekend and I truly enjoyed the quotes at the beginning of each chapter and the references to some of my favorite literature. Read more
Published on April 6, 2009 by Peters365
A true book loving heroine...
Dora knew that her family wasn't quite normal when her mom drove her and her sister off of a 30 foot bridge. Read more
Published on November 5, 2008 by Diane Moore
Disappointing
I'm hugely surprised by all the positive reviews. I was deeply annoyed that I wasted $12 on this book. Read more
Published on May 27, 2008 by K. E. Crisalli
I Longed for More
The literary references redeem this book to some extent but sometimes feel forced as if the authors had a notebook filled with literary quotes and shaped the plot around them so as... Read more
Published on January 31, 2008 by Alexandra
Her life in reference to books!
Cute read! Dora compares her life to the books she has read. She goes on book binges (I actually do too) where she reads nonstop and closes herself off to the outside world. Read more
Published on November 24, 2007 by H. Coleman
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Inside This Book (learn more)
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
New York, Dorothy Parker, Mark Twain, Harper Lady, Edith Wharton, San Vicente, Huck Finn, Eudora Welty
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