You can judge this book, a first novel, by its cover. It features a winsome sketch of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis that evokes a multitude of memories. Similarly, this laugh-out-loud novel gives a surprisingly complete account of the love lives of several women, including Jackie and main character Josie, who sets aside her dissertation on an obscure 19th-century poet when she is unexpectedly given the opportunity to write Jackie's biography. Conflicts arise when Josie begins to suspect that her husband is having an affair and that her mother is an alcoholic, involved with a convicted arsonist. The more Josie learns about her mother and Jackie, the more she understands herself. Heartily recommended.-Dorothy S. Golden, Georgia Southern Univ., Statesboro
A female grad student's coming-of-age tale, and a work so charming, wise, and self-assured it's hard to believe it's a first novelby a Massachusetts author discovered at a Bennington writers' workshop.
Josie Trask has been a student in English lit long enough to have married, given birth to a son, and mothered him for three yearsall without yet having finished her dissertation. Perhaps it's her dissertation's subject that fails to motivate: a virtually unknown 19th-century woman poet from Josie's hometown of Chester, Mass., whose work might not be worth resurrecting. Then again, the irritating success of Josie's husband, Peter, might be the real problem. Having never experienced writer's block, Peter has sailed through his teaching gigs on the popular culture of the '60s, has been awarded a book contract for his own dissertation (From the Valley of the Dolls to the Ballad of the Green Berets), and is now planning to spend the summer in Berkeley drilling college students on the significance of '60s icons. Josie expects to accompany him until she's offered a summer job as researcher for glitzy, lowbrow British biographer Fiona Jones, who's doing a quick posthumous bio of Jackie Onassis. Unable to resist the $10,000, Josie takes the job and devotes herself to investigating JFK's love affairs and Jackie's terrible sorrowsonly half-consciously suspecting that Peter may be doing his own philandering in Berkeley all the while. As the weeks pass, Jackie's triumphs and travails as a wife and mother begin eerily to resemble Josie's ownbut happily, by the end of the summer, both feisty heroines manage to triumph in the face of adversity by winning the respect of their husbands, forging forward in their careers, and lavishing affection on their lucky kids.
As first novels go, this one's a plum.