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A review by nancyadair
The Summer Place by Jennifer Weiner
4.0
Written during COVID, Jennifer Weiner wanted her new novel The Summer Place to be “a fun, lighthearted book,” a family drama “somewhere between a Noel Coward farce and A Midsummer Night’s Dream.” When I read this in the Acknowledgments, I had a totally different reaction to the novel. It is so over-the-top with its twisted relationships and mispairings of lovers! When a character realizes his true sexual orientation thru sexy fan fiction, I burst into laughing for several minutes. Chapters alternated characters, revealing their bad choices, their inability to control their sexual responses to the wrong people.
Not my kind of novel at all, I was thinking. I had read Weiner’s last three novels and each had some issue that was explored through the characters. While reading, I puzzled over what the ‘point’ of this novel was. There was a whole lotta sex going on. A whole lotta secrets that were alienating people from those they most loved. There was a not quite believable resolution. Why did I read this novel?
Then I read the Acknowledgment statement.
Shakespeare’s comedy A Midsummer Night’s Dream takes place before a marriage. By accident, lovers are realigned with very wrong pairings. And looking at The Summer Place this way, as a comedy about human frailty and the power of sexual attraction, how we all err and all need to seek forgiveness and forgive, is a gamechanger.
The pandemic impacted the romance between college students Ruby and Gabe. Gabe is drop-dead gorgeous, and bi, called an ‘angel’ by all who see him. Ruby has lusted after him for years and was thrilled when they finally hooked up. She intends to keep him, sure she will never have another chance like this. When Covid strikes, her parents want her living at home and not in the dorm. Ruby is unwilling to give up Gabe and asks if he can come with her. Her parents allow it.
Ruby’s dad Eli raised her after his first wife left, unhappy with the suburban mom lifestyle she never wanted. Years later, Ruby’s music teacher Sarah and Eli married.
When Ruby proposes to Gabe, her mother is afraid this pandemic romance won’t last, but knows to oppose it will only propel headstrong Ruby into eloping. Her dad’s reaction is quite different: he retreats into himself, distracted and shut down. His behavior harms his marriage, leaving his wife unhappy and open to romancing.
Secrets abound.
Ruby’s grandmother was a novelist who left publishing. She has her secrets, health related and past romance related that casts a shadow on the paternity of her twin children. Ruby’s uncle lost his beloved wife and now is secretly exploring his sexuality. Sarah lost her first love and gave up a career as a concert pianist. Then, there’s Gabe’s single mom who long ago solved an unwanted pregnancy through seduction and lies.
The Summer Place is the Cape Code family cottage, which oddly has a voice in several chapters, a device that didn’t work for me. The house has seen a lot over the years, knows all the history and heartbreak. The grandmother had hoped it would be filled with children and grandchildren, but instead it has been empty every year but for a few days. She intends to sell it. The house is fighting for it’s legacy and future.
Weiner’s books are promoted as perfect ‘beach reads,’ and many will find this book fits the bill. Just don’t take it too seriously. It wasn’t meant to be highbrow. It’s a book to entertain.
I received a free egalley from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.
Not my kind of novel at all, I was thinking. I had read Weiner’s last three novels and each had some issue that was explored through the characters. While reading, I puzzled over what the ‘point’ of this novel was. There was a whole lotta sex going on. A whole lotta secrets that were alienating people from those they most loved. There was a not quite believable resolution. Why did I read this novel?
Then I read the Acknowledgment statement.
Shakespeare’s comedy A Midsummer Night’s Dream takes place before a marriage. By accident, lovers are realigned with very wrong pairings. And looking at The Summer Place this way, as a comedy about human frailty and the power of sexual attraction, how we all err and all need to seek forgiveness and forgive, is a gamechanger.
The pandemic impacted the romance between college students Ruby and Gabe. Gabe is drop-dead gorgeous, and bi, called an ‘angel’ by all who see him. Ruby has lusted after him for years and was thrilled when they finally hooked up. She intends to keep him, sure she will never have another chance like this. When Covid strikes, her parents want her living at home and not in the dorm. Ruby is unwilling to give up Gabe and asks if he can come with her. Her parents allow it.
Ruby’s dad Eli raised her after his first wife left, unhappy with the suburban mom lifestyle she never wanted. Years later, Ruby’s music teacher Sarah and Eli married.
When Ruby proposes to Gabe, her mother is afraid this pandemic romance won’t last, but knows to oppose it will only propel headstrong Ruby into eloping. Her dad’s reaction is quite different: he retreats into himself, distracted and shut down. His behavior harms his marriage, leaving his wife unhappy and open to romancing.
Secrets abound.
Ruby’s grandmother was a novelist who left publishing. She has her secrets, health related and past romance related that casts a shadow on the paternity of her twin children. Ruby’s uncle lost his beloved wife and now is secretly exploring his sexuality. Sarah lost her first love and gave up a career as a concert pianist. Then, there’s Gabe’s single mom who long ago solved an unwanted pregnancy through seduction and lies.
The Summer Place is the Cape Code family cottage, which oddly has a voice in several chapters, a device that didn’t work for me. The house has seen a lot over the years, knows all the history and heartbreak. The grandmother had hoped it would be filled with children and grandchildren, but instead it has been empty every year but for a few days. She intends to sell it. The house is fighting for it’s legacy and future.
Weiner’s books are promoted as perfect ‘beach reads,’ and many will find this book fits the bill. Just don’t take it too seriously. It wasn’t meant to be highbrow. It’s a book to entertain.
I received a free egalley from the publisher through NetGalley. My review is fair and unbiased.