From Publishers Weekly
The perfect nanny exposes the shortcomings of her not-so-perfect employers in this scathing satire by Cheever, author of the memoir
Selling Ben Cheever and three previous novels (
Famous After Death, etc.). Like a literary
Nanny Diaries told from the perspective of the beleaguered parents, Cheever's tart tale skewers its protagonists' ambition, materialism, literary pretensions and sheltered lives. Stuart Cross and Andie Wilde, a sophisticated pair with interesting careers in Manhattan—Stuart is an editor at a prestigious small publishing house, and Andie has just been promoted to the "enviable but not entirely respectable position" of top film critic for the
New York Post—have recently bought a huge house in the suburbs and hired a nanny, the estimable Louise Washington. Louise, who is "Miss Washington" to her employers but "Sugar" to nine-year-old Ginny and six-year-old Jane, is the ideal nanny (she reads Hilaire Belloc to her charges), but also frighteningly accomplished (she's an excellent painter) and threateningly black (her best friend is a nice guy who just happens to have spent some time in prison). Andie, feeling displaced, becomes more and more paranoid about the nanny's activities, while Stuart suffers a professional blow and is galled to learn that the Museum of Modern Art is interested in the nanny's paintings. Cheever is a remorseless observer ("Stuart turned to his girls. Ginny, his eldest daughter, the fat one, had a large stain on the front of her white blouse") and generally accurate social chronicler (though it seems unlikely that the refined Stuart would buy a house in a development called Heavenly Mansions). As this satisfying if sometimes stiflingly mannered morality tale builds to its startlingly violent conclusion, it becomes more than clear that it isn't the nanny Stuart and Andie should fear—it's their own selfish expectations.
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
Cheever, the author of three previous novels (including
Famous after Death, 1999) and several works of nonfiction (
Selling Ben Cheever, 2001, among others), has written what is obviously intended to be a black comedy, but, despite the characters encountering situations that border on the absurd, it seems more awkward and uncomfortable than funny. The main characters are Stuart Cross, a successful editor, and his wife, Andie, a successful movie critic. They are both oblivious to the world around them and move through it with entitlement, eventually wreaking havoc on the lives of their young daughters and their new nanny. They provide their two young daughters with the kind of benevolent neglect that the fictional rich often do. When they are fortunate enough to engage the services of Louise, a talented artist as well as a devoted caregiver, their unwarranted suspicions of the woman, who is black, set in motion a series of events that gives the book its surprisingly tragic ending. Cheever's name-recognition (son of famous fiction writer John Cheever) will be the primary calling card here.
Patrick WallCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved