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Summer Reading: A Novel
 
 
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Summer Reading: A Novel [Hardcover]

Hilma Wolitzer (Author)
2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 22, 2007
Can reading change your life?

Following her acclaimed novel The Doctor’s Daughter, award-winning author Hilma Wolitzer has now written a stirring tale about friendship, romance, inspiration, longing, and, especially, the love of good books. Summer Reading offers a seductive glimpse into the intersecting lives of three very different women.

Summer in the Hamptons means crowded beaches during the day and lavish parties in the evening, but Angela Graves, a retired English professor, prefers the company of Gabriel García Márquez and Charlotte Brontë. Her only steady social contacts are with the women in the reading groups she leads, among them, is wealthy Lissy Snyder, a beautiful newlywed who hosts the twice-monthly meetings of the Page Turners and takes pains to hide a reading disability and her emotional neediness. Hamptons local Michelle Cutty, Lissy’s housecleaner, eavesdrops on the group’s discussions–of books and gossip–when she’s not snooping through Lissy’s closets.

All three women secretly struggle with troubling personal issues that threaten the tenuous balance of their lives: Lissy, abandoned by her father in childhood, is now the unwilling stepmother of her husband’s hostile children; Michelle, resentful of the moneyed arrogance of the jet-setting, seasonal “invaders,” can’t secure a commitment from her fisherman boyfriend; and solitary, bookish Angela still bears the shameful memory of a disastrous love affair that took place long ago.

As Angela encourages the Page Turners to identify with the literary heroines of Trollope and Flaubert, the books–in fact, the act of reading itself–will influence the tough choices the women must make. Stunningly evocative and richly imagined, Summer Reading explores the meaning and consequences of living an authentic life.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

The eighth novel from Wolitzer (The Doctor's Daughter) opens as Alyssa (Lissy) Snyder—trophy second wife, reluctant stepmom, and major dyslexic—hosts a summer book discussion group. She's hoping to catch the attention of Ardith Templeton, who initiated the group and who, with her husband Larry, commands center stage in the tony Hamptons social scene. Retired English professor Angela Graves conducts the group, assigns the readings and tries to inspire her charges to take life lessons from the likes of Jane Eyre and Madame Bovary. Lissy gamely tries to read enough pages (or search out enough online commentary) to appear prepared—but Ardith rarely shows up. Meanwhile, Lissy's husband dotes on his children and begins spending time with his first wife. First-person chapters alternate among Lissy, Angela (who picks over old regrets), and Michelle Cutty, a young local who works as Lissy's summer maid and who provides some class-based frisson. There are small pleasures, but the trio of pretty endings is too hurried (and in Lissy's case too unearned) to be satisfying. (May)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In this intricate tale of love, loss, and redemption, Wolitzer, author most recently of The Doctor's Daughter (2006), tells the story of three women whose paths cross during a summer in the Hamptons. Lissy Snyder, an insecure second wife, is uncertain of her place in her husband's heart and feels intimidated by her stepchildren. To help cement her position in Hamptons society, Lissy decides to host a book club for other young socialites and hires an eccentric former English professor, Angela Graves, to lead the group. Angela guides her pupils through books such as Madame Bovary, inspiring both Lissy and her day girl, Michelle, to reexamine their relationships with the men in their lives. Meanwhile, Angela herself is haunted by a years-old love affair. Wolitzer's subtle analysis reveals the underlying hopes and tensions that guide each woman's daily life as she struggles to come to terms with her own choices and mistakes, led, in part, by the heroines of the books Angela has chosen. Katherine Boyle
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 272 pages
  • Publisher: Ballantine Books; 1 edition (May 22, 2007)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345485866
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345485861
  • Product Dimensions: 9.3 x 6.2 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 2.9 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (16 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,315,873 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

16 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
2.9 out of 5 stars (16 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars Readable, if you have nothing else in the house, August 1, 2007
By 
Beanhauer (Bloomfield, MI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Summer Reading: A Novel (Hardcover)
Like another reviewer, I picked up this book after a mention on NPR. I pushed through it, in the hope that it would improve at some point. It didn't.

The characters are flat, and the connections between them strained. The references to better literature are extraneous. The author hopes to show how these characters are affected by literature, but the connections are implausible. The most literate of the characters loves literature, but we are supposed to believe that she is picking up these classics again and again and finding new insights, and that she is working hard to prepare for a book club of spoiled rich women. I imagined a former college literature professor wouldn't be breaking a sweat to discuss Trollope with these vapid women. The main character is a shallow Hamptons trophy wife, who is alternately bored then suddenly inspired by Charlotte Bronte, Garcia Marquez and Flaubert. In between gossip, shoes, and temptation for affairs, she is stopping to find her life in Madame Bovary?! My favorite character was Michelle, who works as a maid, but she also is implausibly affected by literature. She's working her brains off in someone else's house, has family commitments and a busy life, but she's suddenly not only reading The Autobiography of Frida Kahlo, but drawing comparisons to her own life and spending time contemplating the lives of Mexican artists?

If the gimmick of Great Literature doesn't work, all that is left is the story. The stories of these three women are mildly interesting, worthy of maybe a page apiece. I could find a note of interest in the irredeemable regret of the older woman, and as the young maid found some backbone. The main character, Lissy, really had nothing to offer. She was a shallow character who remained shallow and unsympathetic throughout the book.
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars Cross It Off Your Summer Reading List, September 5, 2007
This review is from: Summer Reading: A Novel (Hardcover)
It's summertime in the Hamptons. Four rich, young, newly married women decide to engage a retired English professor to run a summer book club for them,and thus improve themsevles with Madame Bovary, Villette and other novels. This novel centers on three characters Lissy, rich and young who hosts the club's meetings at her gorgeous home; Michelle, surly, poor and young who is a'townie' and works for Lissy as a maid; and Angela Graves the retired professor.

The three other members of the club make minor appearances. Ardith who rarely shows is 'felt' in the novel as she is a social leader of these young rich matrons and is having an affair with a mafia conncected restraunteur in the area. This sets off daydreams and longing in the others.

Sounds rather banal doesnt it? Well it is. Angela advises her hapless students who can barely muster up the energy or interest to read the assigned novels, that literature helps one understand how to live life. Unfortunately it barely seems to have that effect on anyone in the novel. Not much discussion is given to the novels assigned, Ms. Wolitzer treats her readers as if they are as shallow as those in the book club.

This novel has the hallmarks of the vacuous women's lit genre that is out there today - restlessness, affairs, gossip, bisexuality and problems with step children. The author's writing is sophomoric, a man's day growth of stubble is described as looking like 'it had been breaded'. Another time it is described like 'a bandit's mask". Not terribly original.

Cross this off your summer reading list and read Madame Bovary instead.
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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars dull and trite, July 15, 2008
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i've really enjoyed Wolitzer's other books so i was looking forward to this read. Unfortunately no characters had any depth and the plot was predictable.
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Page Turners, Angela Graves, Guido Masconi, The Springs, Harry Potter, The Battered Clam, Time of Cholera, Seventh Avenue, Lissy Snyder, Irene Rush, Frida Kahlo, Kayla Joy, East Hampton, Emma Bovary, Lucy Snowe
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