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Rise and Shine
by Anna Quindlen
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Synopses & Reviews From Anna Quindlen, acclaimed author of Blessings, Black and Blue and One True Thing, a superb novel about two sisters, the true meaning of success, and the qualities in life that matter most.
It's an otherwise ordinary Monday when Meghan Fitzmaurice’s perfect life hits a wall. A household name as the host of Rise and Shine, the country's highest-rated morning talk show, Meghan cuts to a commercial break – but not before she mutters two forbidden words into her open mike. In an instant, it's the end of an era, not only for Meghan, who is unaccustomed to dealing with adversity, but also for her younger sister, Bridget, a social worker in the Bronx who has always lived in Meghan's long shadow. The effect of Meghan's on-air truth telling reverberates through both their lives, affecting Meghan's son, husband, friends, and fans, as well as Bridget's perception of her sister, their complex childhood, and herself. What follows is a story about how, in very different ways, the Fitzmaurice women adapt, survive, and manage to bring the whole teeming world of New York to heel by dint of their smart mouths, quick wits, and the powerful connection between them that even the worst tragedy cannot shatter. Review: "Bridget Fitzmaurice, the narrator of Quindlen's engrossing fifth novel, works for a women's shelter in the Bronx; her older sister, Meghan, cohost of the popular morning show Rise and Shine, is the most famous woman on television. Bridget acts as a second mother to the busy Meghan's college student son, Leo; Meghan barely tolerates Bridget's significant other, a gritty veteran police detective named Irving Lefkowitz. After 9/11 (which happens off-camera) and the subsequent walking out of Meghan's beleaguered husband, Evan, Meghan calls a major politician a 'fucking asshole' before her microphone gets turned off for a commercial, and Megan and Bridget's lives change forever. As Bridget struggles to mend familial fences and deal with reconfigurations in their lives wrought by Meghan's single phrase, Quindlen has her lob plenty of pungent observations about both life in class-stratified New York City and about family dynamics. The situation is ripe with comic potential, which Bridget deadpans her way through, and Quindlen goes along with Bridget's cool reserve and judgmentalism. The plot is very imbalanced: a couple of events early, then virtually nothing until a series of major revelations in the last 50 or so pages. The prose is top-notch; readers may be more interested in Quindlen's insights than in the lives of her two main characters." Publishers Weekly (Copyright Reed Business Information, Inc.) Review: "'Rise and Shine' is a literate and pleasing women's novel about two sisters: Meghan Fitzmaurice, beautiful beyond belief, happily married to Evan and mother of a preternaturally lovable teen-age son, Leo, who will loom large in the plot. Meghan is also the host of a national morning talk show, 'Rise and Shine.' Put plainly, she's a woman who has — or seems to have — it all. She's always seen from ... Washington Post Book Review (read the entire Washington Post review) the outside here, described affectionately enough by Bridget, her younger sister, who, by comparison, doesn't seem to have much of anything at all. Where Meghan is beautiful, Bridget is pretty; where Meghan is married to the rich and handsome Evan, childless Bridget is carrying on a very low-maintenance affair with Irving Lefkowitz, a hard-boiled Jewish cop just a few steps this side of elderly. While Meghan instructs the entire nation on upwardly mobile trends, Bridget is employed as a social worker in the Bronx, dealing with 'lost public assistance checks, arson fires, black eyes, trips to family court, foster care placements, and calls from the cops to keep up with breaking news.' Clearly, there are two New Yorks here, and each sister dwells in a different one. Bridget isn't the jealous type, but she can't help but be aware of the disparity between their lives. 'Every Saturday morning,' Bridget observes ironically, 'unless she is covering the Olympics, the Oscars, a disaster, or an inauguration, my sister and I go running together in the park and have breakfast either at her apartment or at the Greek diner down the street from mine. She will tell you she is forced to set a slower pace because I don't exercise enough. She sees this as evidence of my essential sloth.' Within the first four or five pages of the novel, then, we know that we're dealing with a retelling of the truism that the mighty must inevitably fall. The woman who has everything will soon find herself with her lovely nose in the dirt, and it will be her humble, unassuming (if somewhat tiresome) sister who must help her to rise again. But this classic story gains greatly in intensity because of the place where it is set — the magnificent and intimidating city of New York, the crucible in which most American worldly success is defined. 'I will say I live in New York,' Bridget announces, this time without any irony at all, 'because it is the center of the universe.' Thus, a simple tale of two sisters, one full of hubris, the other of virtue, becomes a prismatic reflection of the metropolis itself. 'Bad news comes to you in strange ways in New York,' Bridget observes, as she finds out the first part of the bad news that will propel this novel. Or, more discursively: 'The black car could be the official icon of New York, or at least the New York Evan and Meghan call home. ... New Yorkers with pretensions but middle-class means take one for airport trips or special occasions, an anniversary at the River Cafe or a black-tie event at the Waldorf.' (And so on, for a dozen more lines.) Or: 'It is impossible to get lost in New York because, by some defiance of the law of averages, you keep running into people you know on the street, on the subways, and in restaurants.' (The common sense explanation for this is that the island of Manhattan is about the size of 20 junior colleges pushed together, but ah! if it's the center of the universe, there has to be a Larger Reason than that.) After her first misfortune, the hitherto indestructible Meghan confides to her sister, 'You know what (New York) looks like? It looks like a mouthful of sharp silver teeth. It's the scariest thing you'd ever want to see. It's all right if you're nobody, and it's great if you're on the way up. But man, it is a place that is cruel to used-to-bes. Divorced wives, has-been writers, rich guys who aren't rich anymore.' What happens early on in 'Rise and Shine' is that the amazingly lucky Meghan takes a hideous double hit in her fabulous life. Her husband dumps her without warning. The next morning — thinking the microphone is off — she utters true (but madly inappropriate) words on her talk show and is summarily suspended. She crumbles emotionally and flees the city. Bridget is left to try to make sense of it all, flabbergasted by the goings-on of her brother-in-law, trying, as best she can, to take care of her painfully hurt young nephew, Leo. She's not too bright about Leo, finding him an internship at the very scary place where she works in the Bronx, but her intentions are so good you just know nothing bad will happen. She also has the temerity to go on with her own life, getting pregnant with twins at age 43, even though her aging cop boyfriend is anything but happy about it. It seems that Bridget and, by extension, the author believe in the efficacy of good deeds and good hearts, even in that scary place with its fabled indifference to hapless individuals, whether they be famous or not. The sisters have faced adversity before and certainly will again, but this kind of novel demands a happy ending and gets it. Some unfortunate events occur that seem to be the fault of one sister but are actually due to the ignorance of the other. One of them will end up with a man whose last name is Prevaricator, which doesn't seem to bode all that well for the future. A minor character suffers a life-changing tragedy, but all's well that ends (fairly) well, so they say. Anna Quindlen has developed an enormously likable writing voice, and by telling her tale through the humble voice of an unassuming naif, she allows her readers the illusion that we all might live securely within the velvety pink confines of the New York maw, safely out of the way of those silver teeth. She makes the city accessible and downright neighborly.(That's why we call this stuff fiction, I guess.)" Reviewed by Carolyn See, who can be reached at www.carolynsee.com, Washington Post Book World (Copyright 2006 Washington Post Book World Service/Washington Post Writers Group)
(hide most of this review) Review: "[T]his novel, Ms. Quindlen's fifth...stands on its own as a writerly achievement, her best so far." New York Times Review: "Quindlen...is at her best when she uses her reporter's skills in describing a New York moment, a restaurant scene, a party interlude, a ride on the subway, or an apartment collapse that sends desperate women begging for social services." Chicago Sun-Times Synopsis: Megan, host of the country's highest ranking talk show — before she uttered profanity on air — and her social worker sister Bridget share smart mouths, a fractured childhood, and a powerful connection that even the worst tragedy can't rupture.
About the Author Anna Quindlen is an American journalist and opinion columnist whose New York Times column, "Public and Private," won the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary in 1992.
Product Details
- ISBN:
- 9780375502248
- Author:
- Quindlen, Anna
- Publisher:
- Random House
- Subject:
- General
- Subject:
- Sisters
- Subject:
- Women journalists
- Publication Date:
- August 2006
- Binding:
- Hardcover
- Language:
- English
- Pages:
- 269
- Dimensions:
- 9.44x6.42x1.07 in. 1.16 lbs.
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