Small World: A Novel

Small World: A Novel

by Laura Zigman

Narrated by Stacey Glemboski

Unabridged — 8 hours, 3 minutes

Small World: A Novel

Small World: A Novel

by Laura Zigman

Narrated by Stacey Glemboski

Unabridged — 8 hours, 3 minutes

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Overview

“[A] brave and heartfelt book of truths.”-New York Times Book Review*(A Group Text Pick and Editors' Choice)

A Boston.com Book Club Pick!

From bestselling author Laura Zigman comes a heartfelt novel about two offbeat and newly divorced sisters who move in together as adults-and finally reckon with their childhood

A year after her divorce, Joyce is settling into being single again. She likes her job archiving family photos and videos, and she's developed a secret comforting hobby: trolling the neighborhood social networking site, Small World, for posts that help solve life's easiest problems. When her older sister, Lydia, also divorced, calls to tell her she's moving back east from Los Angeles after almost thirty years away, Joyce invites Lydia to move into her Cambridge apartment. Temporarily. Just until she finds a place of her own.

But their unlikely cohabitation-not helped by annoying new neighbors upstairs-turns out to be the post-divorce rebound relationship Joyce hadn't planned on. Instead of forging the bond she always dreamed of having with Lydia, their relationship frays. And they rarely discuss the loss of their sister, Eleanor, who was significantly disabled and died when she was only ten years old. When new revelations from their family's history come to light, will those secrets further split them apart, or course correct their connection for the future?

Written with wry humor and keen sensitivity, Small World is a powerful novel of sisterhood and hope-a reminder that sometimes you have to look back in order to move ahead.*


Editorial Reviews

FEBRUARY 2023 - AudioFile

Narrator Stacey Glemboski gives an extraordinary performance of this immersive family drama. Middle-aged sisters Joyce and Lydia, who are both divorced and childless, decide to live together in Joyce's Cambridge apartment. The story is told from the perspective of Joyce, whose defensive, prickly persona is wonderfully captured by Glemboski. Lydia's social awkwardness is expertly portrayed by Glemboski in a light, impulsive tone. Listeners become fully invested as the narrative shifts from the present to flashbacks of the sisters' difficult upbringing by neglectful parents, as well as the childhood death of their disabled sister. Glemboski splendidly depicts the sisters' struggles with each other and with their fractured pasts. An exceptional performance enhances an honestly told and satisfying family story. M.J. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Publishers Weekly

★ 11/28/2022

In Zigman’s entrancing and thorny latest (after Separation Anxiety), two sisters confront the childhood death of their middle sister. After living in Los Angeles for 30 years, Lydia Mellishman moves in with her younger sister, Joyce, in Cambridge, Mass. Both women are divorced and childless, and are hopeful that rooming together will mean they can finally develop a bond. Lydia, however, remains her old bristly self: she’s rude and inconsiderate of Joyce’s feelings, especially after Lydia befriends their new neighbors Sonia and Stan, who disrupt Joyce’s life with the noise of their illegal yoga studio. As the narrative flits between the present and the sisters’ childhood, it becomes clear that their dynamic is fueled by having been neglected as children by their mother, Louise. Despite Joyce’s stutter and Lydia’s dyslexia, Louise directed her attention toward their sister Eleanor, who had cerebral palsy and died from the flu when she was 10. Later, Louise continued focusing on advocacy work for children with special needs. After Joyce’s job as an archivist leads her to someone from Louise’s circle, Lydia shares a secret, and the sisters find an opportunity for reckoning. Zigman does a stellar job of creating well-rounded characters, and a satisfying ending tops off her well-crafted paean to sisterhood. Readers will love this. Agent: Stephanie Rostan, Levine Greenberg Rostan. (Jan.)

From the Publisher

The novel is as poignant as it is funny, as thought-provoking as it is witty, and searingly relatable.” — Washington Post

“Zigman's tenderly told novel is a realistic rendering of what it's like to care for and love a disabled child, and the toll that love takes on parents and siblings. It's also about the bonds that sisters share and how, in the case of the Mellishmans, unresolved grief nearly breaks them...[but] laced with the promise of a brighter future.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune

“Zigman is terrific at melding heartbreaking situations with humorous, evocative details without once veering off into saccharine sentimentality…Zigman’s ability to elicit the transformative magic that happens when people find true connection with others makes these pages glow.”  — Boston Globe

"A graceful swan dive into the question of how a family rearranges itself after the death of a child…a brave and heartfelt book of truths." — New York Times Book Review

"Zigman's quirky novel confronts the most painful family issues and is equally knowing—and funny—about what brings comfort and grace." — People

“Entrancing. . . . Zigman does a stellar job of creating well-rounded characters, and a satisfying ending tops off her well-crafted paean to sisterhood. Readers will love this.” — Publishers Weekly (starred review)

“I absolutely loved Small World — a wise, warm, and often hilarious exploration of sisterhood and community, set against a nuanced portrait of one family’s tragic past.” — Shelby Van Pelt, author of Remarkably Bright Creatures

“Like all of Laura Zigman’s books, Small World is wryly funny and sharply observed. But this moving story of two adult sisters reconnecting in midlife also tackles some weighty subjects—family secrets, disability, abandonment—with unusual grace and sensitivity.”

Tom Perrotta, author of Tracy Flick Can’t Win

“Hilarious, wise, and deeply moving—I loved my time with the Mellishman sisters and didn't want it to end. No one captures the tragicomedies of life quite like Laura Zigman, whose compassion and brilliance shine through on every page.” — Mona Awad, author of All's Well and Bunny

"[Zigman] excels at depicting the emotional push and pull of sibling relationships. . . Yet she never loses her sharp sense of humor. . . A compassionate, often funny examination of shared family grief and love." — Kirkus Reviews 

“A tender story of two sisters who, both in midlife and both recently divorced, move in together. . . A moving story about the power of family secrets, sisterhood, and memory. Readers of authors such as Jodi Picoult, Barbara Kingsolver, or Kristin Hannah will be affected by Zigman’s skillful and sensitive chronicling of a sisterhood simultaneously affected by the past and finding a new future.” — Booklist

“Small World is a treasure: a family story that is wistful one moment, witty and wry the next. Few novelists write as beautifully about the damaged heart and the wounded soul as Laura Zigman, or understand the emotional bonds of siblings and sisters. I loved this novel.”
Chris Bohjalian, #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Flight Attendant and The Lioness

“A profound exploration of the depths and limits of unconditional love, Small World examines what it means to be a mother, a daughter, a sister, a person in the world. By turns hilarious and haunting, this is a novel for the ages.” — Joanna Rakoff, author of My Salinger Year

“Abundant humor. . . . Revolving around two middle-aged sisters who have recently been left by their husbands, Small World parses a bramble of secrets, hurts and other mainstays of the all-absorbing kin novel.” — Shelf Awareness

Small World offers a warming tonic against ice and gloom. . . . Zigman writes insightfully of the agonizing push-pull of a family raising a child with severe needs. . . . The book’s short, powerful epigraph is ‘I came to explore the wreck.’ – a line from Adrienne Rich’s ‘Diving into the Wreck.’ Choosing to enter an ancient vessel that has been deeply buried for years takes some courage — kind of like Joyce and Lydia bravely exploring their own history.” — WBUR

"A tender, funny novel that proves the smallest stories can have the biggest heart." — The Hollywood Reporter

"A deft writer, Zigman knits this story together like a beautiful scarf." — Lee Woodruff, Book Marks

“Great wit and wisdom permeate Laura Zigman’s quirky story..Balancing grief with humor…A delight.” — Christian Science Monitor

“I welcomed the chance to get lost in this compulsively readable novel and be drawn into a poignant family drama of remembrance, recrimination, and uneasy reconciliation, leavened by Zigman’s psychological acuity and capacity to reveal the unforgiving absurdities of intimacy.” — Mother Jones

#1 New York Times bestselling author Chris Bohjalian

Small World is a treasure.”

Mona Awad

Hilarious, wise and deeply moving—I loved my time with the Mellishman sisters and didn't want it to end. No one captures the tragicomedies of life quite like Laura Zigman, whose compassion and brilliance shines through on every page.

Shelby Van Pelt

I absolutely loved Small World — a wise, warm, and often hilarious exploration of sisterhood and community, set against a nuanced portrait of one family’s tragic past.

Chris Bohjalian

Small World is a treasure: a family story that is wistful one moment, witty and wry the next. Few novelists write as beautifully about the damaged heart and the wounded soul as Laura Zigman, or understand the emotional bonds of siblings and sisters. I loved this novel.”

Joanna Rakoff

A profound exploration of the depths and limits of unconditional love, Small World examines what it means to be a mother, a daughter, a sister, a person in the world. By turns hilarious and haunting, this is a novel for the ages.

FEBRUARY 2023 - AudioFile

Narrator Stacey Glemboski gives an extraordinary performance of this immersive family drama. Middle-aged sisters Joyce and Lydia, who are both divorced and childless, decide to live together in Joyce's Cambridge apartment. The story is told from the perspective of Joyce, whose defensive, prickly persona is wonderfully captured by Glemboski. Lydia's social awkwardness is expertly portrayed by Glemboski in a light, impulsive tone. Listeners become fully invested as the narrative shifts from the present to flashbacks of the sisters' difficult upbringing by neglectful parents, as well as the childhood death of their disabled sister. Glemboski splendidly depicts the sisters' struggles with each other and with their fractured pasts. An exceptional performance enhances an honestly told and satisfying family story. M.J. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2023, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

2022-10-12
Two adult siblings move in together and struggle to come to terms with the long-ago loss of their disabled sister and their own troubled relationship.

Like most siblings, the middle-aged Mellishman sisters at the heart of Zigman’s amusing yet poignant new novel have chapters of history propping them up and weighing them down. Newly divorced Joyce, an archivist in Cambridge, is getting used to solitude again, whiling away her time on a neighborhood site called Small World, turning her neighbors’ queries and complaints into strange but potent poetry. The act, she says, is therapeutic—and also easier than addressing the nagging questions about her own life. When Lydia, her older sister, leaves LA for the East Coast, Joyce invites her to move in for a while, secretly hoping proximity will force them to forge a bond they never quite managed to build. But they still can’t seem to communicate or talk about their past. Their childhoods were laser-focused on Eleanor, their severely disabled sister, who died at 10. But although Eleanor’s life was short, her impact was lasting, especially on her sisters, who learned to hide their own fears and problems in order to focus on hers. Zigman, who excels at depicting the emotional push and pull of sibling relationships, examines the conflicts and grief that play out in a family dealing with a disabled child with compassion and honesty. Yet she never loses her sharp sense of humor, as evidenced by the hilarious ongoing war between Joyce and her new upstairs neighbors, who seem to be running a yoga studio. As she reveals secrets previously unknown to Joyce, Zigman doesn’t shy away from discussing the hardships the Mellishmans faced, but she also highlights small moments of wonder and joy that illuminate the sisters’ shared path. The world might feel small, Joyce learns, but the power of hope always looms large.

A compassionate, often funny examination of shared family grief and love.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940175881746
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Publication date: 01/10/2023
Edition description: Unabridged
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