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Our Lady Of The Prairie Hardcover – January 23, 2018
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In the space of a few torrid months on the Iowa prairie, Phillipa Maakestad—long-married theater professor and mother of an unstable daughter—grapples with a life turned upside down. After falling headlong into a passionate affair during a semester spent teaching in Ohio, Phillipa returns home to Iowa for her daughter Ginny’s wedding. There, Phillipa must endure (among other things) a wedding-day tornado, a menace of a mother-in-law who may or may not have been a Nazi collaborator, and the tragicomic revenge fantasies of her heretofore docile husband.
Naturally, she does what any newly liberated woman would do: she takes a match to her life on the prairie and then steps back to survey the wreckage.
Set in the seething political climate of a contentious election,Thisbe Nissen's new novel is sexy, smart, and razor-sharp—a freight train barreling through the heart of the land and the land of the heart.
- Print length368 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherHarper Paperbacks
- Publication dateJanuary 23, 2018
- Dimensions6 x 1.25 x 9 inches
- ISBN-101328662071
- ISBN-13978-1328662071
Editorial Reviews
Review
Vanity Fair's "What to Read in February" "As gripping as it is hilarious...Our Lady of the Prairie captures Nissen’s curiosity about the people she has lived around and encountered." —Vanity Fair, "Our Lady of the Prairie, the Novel That Makes Hay of the Recent Political Past" "Wonderfully witty...A satirical take on the serene Midwestern life and an insightful, comical look at a woman whose life starts to unravel at breakneck speed." —Chicago Review of Books, "The Most Anticipated Fiction Books of 2018" "Brazen, sexy, and whip smart: We adored this ode to the power and spirit of feisty Midwestern women." —Refinery 29, "The Best Books Of 2018 We Can't Wait To Read This Month" "While most marriage stories are concerned with the first flush of wedded life, Nissen's new novel, set during the 2004 Bush-Kerry election, skips straight to the end. 'From the moment I saw Lucius Bocelli,' the first sentence reads, 'I wanted to go to bed with him.' One problem: The narrator, 50-year-old Phillipa Maakestad, is already married...[The novel] reveal[s] something that run much deeper and darker than mere extramarital passion." —New York Times Book Review "Thisbe Nissen's Our Lady of the Prairie is an exploration of what it means to be a levelheaded individual who suddenly has a life that is anything but level. At times it will leave you in stitches, at others, in tears — but it's one hell of a read." —PopSugar, "The 16 Best Books Hitting Shelves in January" "Nissen excels at capturing her protagonist as a woman on the edge—the elation, the sex, the emotional roller coaster, the questionable choices." —Publishers Weekly "With humor, grace, and honesty, Nissen’s three heroines ride an emotional roller coaster as they reconcile their respective pasts, ride out a turbulent present, and, hopefully, secure a more serene future." —Booklist "I devoured this novel. It's full of the sweet, crazed, exhausted, love-saturated, tension-flecked bustle of family, and the finely-rendered complexities of intimacy--that vexing, sublime, shape-shifting beast. So much humanity and surprise in this book. It just made my whole being vibrate and hum with the impossible, inevitable business of loving other people." —Leslie Jamison, New York Times bestselling author of The Empathy Exams and The Recovering "Thisbe Nissen's Our Lady of the Prairie is a Midwestern fever dream, a bold and ambitious look into the roiling emotions of a woman caught between should and could, between I must and I want. I found it funny, angry, hopeful, heartfelt, and above all, honest: about marriage, family, and that old-fashioned, endlessly fascinating thing called desire.” —Joshua Ferris, author of Then We Came to the End and The Dinner Party “Our Lady of the Prairie is a marvel of a book: exuberant, frisky, and fierce. Thisbe Nissen's surprising storytelling is matched only by her ability to conjure such a terrific heroine: a woman brimming with desire and rage, and a need for secrets to step into the light.” —Edan Lepucki, author of Woman No. 17&nbs —
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
My Husband Was Dresden
From the moment I saw Lucius Bocelli I wanted to go to bed with him. If I'd known then what Michael would put me through by way of penanc?e'in twenty-six years of marriage you'd think if he'd so badly needed to spank me he'd've found an opportunity'?I might have simply given in. Instead I spent three months in tortuous longing before succumbing to all I felt for Lucius. But retrospect is convenient, life less so. Even if I should have foreseen'or already known of'my husband's peccadilloes, I still could not have gazed into the future to know, say, the path that May's tornado would take across Iowa, straight through our daughter's wedding. I met Lucius in late January. I'd just arrived in Ohio for my semester's teaching exchange; he was recently back from a year and a half in France, a research sabbatical he'd extended with an additional six-month leave. His work was on Nazi collaborationists of the Vichy regime, and he'd be headed back to France that summer, but when we met it was only January. The Democrats hadn't even nominated someone to run against Dubya and bar him from a second term. Bernadette'the mother-in-law whose belligerent existence I'd suffered for more than half my life'?was still alive and kicking me at every available opportunity, and Ginny wasn't yet married to Silas Yoder, or pregnant and off her psych meds and once again as miserable as she'd been before the electroshock. Orah and Obadiah Yoder were already dead'?Silas and Eula's parents, hit head-on and killed by an SUV, in their own buggy in front of their own Prairie farm'and a year had done little to dissipate that pain. The birth of Eula's baby had diverted us, yes. My point is this: when I met Lucius my life was more stable than it had been in twenty-five years. I met him, and I wanted him'?more clearly, and maybe less complicatedly, than I think I have ever wanted anything in this life.
There'd been a reading at the U of O'a progressive political commentator'with a gathering afterward at the dean's home, for the obligatory university-issue cheese-and-cracker platters and a Midwestern supermarket arrangement of crudité: concentric moats of gray-tinged cauliflower, parched baby carrots, and inedibly mushy grape tomatoes surrounding the ranch dip bowl. Guests represented the left of the U of O faculty, and there was a collective relief at being surrounded by other sane people at a time when the main'hell, the only'??criteria for sanity were (a) abject terror at the state of the union, and (b) downright hatred of the president, who had about as much ability to run the country as one of our thickheaded, eighteen-year-old frat boys. And less humility, which is almost inconceivable. The wine flowed that night, and it was lousy, but it was on the U, so we drank with zeal. In Ohio, at the end of January, four-foot snowbanks turning the campus into a giant ice maze, you drink what's offered, and you're grateful.
I'd gotten a lift to the dean's house from Anthea Lingafelter, a Romanticist. As we entered, I saw, leaning in the arch of the foyer, a man I took instantly to be the actor Ed Harris. I'd like to imagine my next thought would have been, What the hell is Ed Harris doing here?, but Anthea had paused to make introductions and my hand was already extended as I heard her say, 'Phillipa Maakestad'on loan to us'theater.' I was beaming a sort of I-thought-Pollock-was-brilliant smile when it seemed that, of this man whose hand I was shaking, Anthea was saying, 'Lucius Bocelli, History.' His expression mutated from pleased-to-meet-you to perplexity. I'd been holding his hand far longer than appropriate and dropped it abruptly, jerking away. A step behind my own actions, the soundtrack of my brain was out of sync with the picture. I shook hands with the others in the group, registering nothing. Then Anthea guided me away toward a den, slipping her parka onto a futon couch where coats were being piled.
"I thought he was Ed Harris!' I told her.
Anthea glanced back, her look inscrutable to me, and said, 'Lucius?' When I made a face to say, Yes, the Ed Harris look-alike, who else?, she lifted her chin and let out a hoot'??a hoot that only became clear much later when Lucius told me of the affair they'd had years before. Anthea's divorce, I will note, was not on Lucius's account.
I encountered Lucius minutes later on line at the makeshift bar. He came up behind me. 'the wine's no good," he said, 'but it makes the socializing go down easier."
I was conscious of my own breath'I heard it like the rush of wind through a tunnel'and I'm not a woman often conscious of her own breath. "I'm so sorry.' I lifted my hand toward the site of our introduction. "I thought you were Ed Harris.' I shook my head in castigation for my absurdity. A smile spread across his face, crinkling his eyes, and I saw he was older than I'd realized. For no reason I can understand, it was this that hit my pelvis: realization of his age somehow turned my breathless giddiness into grave desire.
Lucius's eyes'??pale, pale blue'were deeply set, corners striated with wrinkles, the skin there thin and tissuey as parchment. I had to physically restrain myself from lifting my hand to run a thumb across that delicacy. His face was so hard and sculpted it made that thin-thin skin at the corners of his eyes seem all the more fragile, their sadness devastatingly palpable. To see him smile felt like a triumph, and I may have known then that I would love this man with a ferocity, and an urgency, and a gravity I had never experienced before.
He dropped his chin, tucked it to his neck, and peered at me as if over reading glasses he wasn't actually wearing. "I suspect," he said, 'you just can't tell one bald man from another."
"Come on," I said, 'it's not like I mistook you for Danny DeVito."
His grin broke wide again'?''?the shine of those sad, deep-set eyes. He conceded my point.
"Or Gandhi," I said.
"No," he said thoughtfully, mock-thoughtfully. "No, not Gandhi."
"Bruce Willis?.?.?. Telly Savalis?.?.?. Yule Brynner?.?.?."
"Now you're talking really bald'I have my scruff.' He fluffed at his hair. 'my tufts."
"Which," I pointed out, 'is why I thought you were Ed Harris and got a bit tongue-tied."
Lucius looked suddenly disappointed. He'd glanced at my left hand: 'You're married."
Without thinking, I shifted my hands on my hips to cover my knuckles, absurdly hiding the ring he'd already seen. "You?' I asked.
He tipped back his plastic glass, drained its dregs, stuck it in the underarm crook of his blazer, and held his hands out as though I'd asked to inspect his fingernails. Because of the cup, one arm was hitched up shorter than the other, his back bent as if in halfhearted Igor impersonation. His fingernails were clean, cut short, healthy pink, and he had small hands, downy with grayed hair I could tell had once been golden blond. They made me think of lifeguards on the California beaches of my childhood'muscled hands, thick-veined, wiry like the rest of him; he's sinewy and compact as a greyhound. He wore no ring. 'thrice was plenty," he said, then straightened and caught his cup as it fell.
I'd be lying to say I wasn't alarmed. Three marriages? But he was so forthcoming, and emotion overrode skepticism. I was already in love, and reconciled the question instantly. One failed marriage in this era barely warrants mention; at our age, two is hardly surprising. Three, though, calls for a story: a brief starter marriage, maybe, then a long-term one, ending in her death'cancer'?'and then an awful, grief-spurred, six-month catastrophe. That's what I imagined. "Kids?' I asked, and I'd like to think if he had more than, say, four'or any were still underage'I would have run, but I'd probably have found a way to reconcile that, too.
He was nodding. 'two, from my second marriage. Jesus, they're middle-aged," he said sheepishly. "Hannah and Tim. Both married. Kids of their own who aren't even kids anymore.' He laid it out like he was coming clean.
"Grandkids'??how old are you?' I'd assumed he was maybe Michael's age, sixtyish.
Lucius chuckled. "Put it this way: I'm Medicare-eligible."
"You are not."
His lips closed in a knowing line. "Oh, yes. Indeed I am. And yourself?"
"Fifty," I told him.
"And the rest?"
My eyes felt extraordinarily wide. I dropped my hands and faced him like a refugee. Like someone with nothing left to lose, which wasn't the case at all. "One daughter, Ginny. Twenty-five. Getting married in May.' It was so easy to say. Just like that, I'd practically written Ginny a new life story'?''?leapt over years of hospital corridors and caloric mandates, meth dens and court orders, razor blades and electroconvulsive shock'?''?flew over it all and announced that I had a daughter about to be married. It wasn't a lie; it was entirely true'?''?and it was glorious.
Product details
- Publisher : Harper Paperbacks (January 23, 2018)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 368 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1328662071
- ISBN-13 : 978-1328662071
- Item Weight : 1.06 pounds
- Dimensions : 6 x 1.25 x 9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #3,879,822 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #28,551 in Women's Domestic Life Fiction
- #42,261 in Family Life Fiction (Books)
- #56,251 in Contemporary Women Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
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Reviewed in the United States on February 26, 2018
It was also strange that she supposedly loved her daughter and sacrificed for her daughter, yet she is seldom around when her daughter needs her. In fact, she spends the day before her daughter's wedding confessing an affair to her husband so that they can appear "normal" at the wedding. Of course, they could have appeared more "normal" if she had simply waited one day to tell him.
Her daughter, meanwhile, seems to be a whiny brat who underwent some devastating times, recovered, and now thinks the world owes her. Case in point--she tries very hard to get pregnant, then decides makes decision that suggest she is very, very self-absorbed and unfeeling. And her husband appears to be such a wimp that his reaction to her affair would be comical if it were not so disturbing.
The first part of this book was fine. I was actually enjoying it--a professor has an affair and feels guilt. But then it turned into a pity party for the professor, who does not seem to grasp the idea that she decided her future.
I have been waiting and aching for her to publish again.
Thank you so much for exceeding my expectations. I hope that many more novels will follow this one. I treasure them all.
But as odd as the plot and the story-within-a-story are, what ultimately killed it for me was that the author sets the story during the 2004 election. Philippa is an outspoken Liberal who volunteers for the Kerry campaign, but we are too far removed from this election and its issues to immediately sympathize with any position, much less her polemics, and it doesn’t help that the current political climate seems so much more dire. I supported Kerry in 2004 and even I wanted her to shut up already so we could focus on her personal story. Sadly, by the time it was more or less resolved I found I no longer really cared what happened to any of the characters.
Top reviews from other countries
However, Ginny marries a nice lapsed Amish boy in a tornado (it’s the Mid-West) after Philippa has told her husband Michael about Lucius. The highs and lows of separation and the uncertainty about a new relationship are made more difficult by Ginny’s state of mind. Politics comes into play as Phil takes over Ginny’s crusade to get Kerry elected over Bush. One of the most enjoyable aspects of this book is the lambasting thoughts Philippa has about gun-toting, religious right types and her musings on church signs (Christianity is a prophet-sharing scheme). She can really let rip about her fellow Americans. She has to learn not to make assumptions though, and when distraught, to take on board Lucius’ saner, more realistic take. This is a very rich novel, full of interesting minor characters and covering as it does themes of mental health, parenthood, old age, Vichy France, having the courage to be honest with others, sex and the premenopausal woman, the varieties of Amish life and life in a Mid-West university town.

