SKNANB MoBanking
Finance
App
With the Mobile Banking app from SKNA National Bank, you can easily take your bank with you, *check...
Nordea Mobilbank – Sverige
Finance and Business
App
Happy to see you're interested in our Mobile bank. The app is secure, quick and easy to use when you...
Realm Grinder
Games
App
Grow your kingdom, build alliances, and explore one of the deepest idle RPG's ever! Use your money...
Coach Bus Simulator 2017 *
Games
App
Brand New Game from Producers of City Driving and Truck Simulator 2017. Completely realistic...
The Simple Truth (Falls Village #10)
Book
Falls Village. A place to be free, to be out and proud, and to live the life he’d dreamed about...
What Beauty There Is
Book
Perfect for fans of Patrick Ness, Meg Rosoff and Daniel Woodrell, What Beauty There Is is an...
Suspense Coming of age
GoMore – rental & ridesharing
Travel
App
Your must-have free travel app! Ridesharing and peer-to-peer car rental right in your pocket. -...
Accidentally Yours
Book
Possessive, dominant, undeniable. She and I are strangers, But there’s a billion-dollar...
Un indien dans la ville (1994)
Movie
The Parisian broker Stephan only needs the signature from his wife Patricia for their divorce - but...
This novel received a lot of hype, so of course I avoided reading it for a while. As I was reading it, I thought for quite some time that I'd been duped, as it seemed to be about a bunch of greedy, hateful siblings who cared about nothing but money and appearances. But D'Aprix Sweeney has a deft way with words and somehow, amazingly, this book is compulsively readable and surprisingly enjoyable. After a while, you get to know each Plumb sibling fairly well. While some are pretty despicable (ahem, Leo, ahem), some are just people and parents trying to get by--albeit not always in the most reasonable fashion. I felt the worst for Bea and Melody.
The most interesting part about this novel is that D'Aprix Sweeney doesn't just focus on the four siblings, but she opens up the aperture to include a whole cast of supporting characters, and that is where the novel really shines. Everyone becomes connected somehow, but it doesn't feel trite. We hear from folks in the literary world who work (and love) Bea and Leo, for instance. Leo's love interest (and Bea's editor) Stephanie is my favorite. So while parts of the novel are predictable and I found myself wondering if I cared about any of the Plumbs whatsoever, it's the characters to whom they are connected that are interesting. It takes a talented author to make you want to read a story, even if you don't like the main characters, per se. However, you'll find yourself caught up in the story and wanting to find out what happens. The bonus of extending the characters beyond the four Plumbs is that you get several characters' perspective on an issue or event. In the end, things tie up and together, but again, not too neatly or annoyingly. The ending is perfect somehow--again, a testament to the author's skill.
Overall, the novel surprised me. I honestly usually am not a fan of the spoiled New Yorker novels, but this one was different. It really drew me in. There's a depth and a warmth behind the characters. Definitely worth reading.
<a href="http://justacatandabookatherside.blogspot.com/">My Blog</a> ~ <a href="https://www.facebook.com/justacatandabook/">Facebook</a> ~ <a href="https://twitter.com/justacatandbook">Twitter</a>
