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Surrender, Dorothy: A Novel by Meg Wolitzer
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Surrender, Dorothy: A Novel

by Meg Wolitzer

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71386,464 (3.05)3
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With an intriguing scenario filled with promise, this book went downhill for me after the arrival of Natalie, the mourning mother, to spend the month of August with her late daughter's friends. Some achingly true feelings expressed about the difference betweeen those who've experienced devastating loss, and those who haven't, but ruined for me by the unnatural intrusion of sex into every thread of the relationships. ( )
  dreamreader | Apr 12, 2009 |
Sara is almost 30, working on her master's in Japanese studies, is uncommonly and bizarrely close to her divorced mother Natalie, and her very best friend in the whole world is Adam, a gay writer who has written a smash Broadway play. This isn't a spoiler because it happens at the very beginning of the book. Sara is killed in a car accident, and the majority of the book is how her mother, Adam, and her other friends Maddy and Peter deal with the loss of Sara. There are some funny parts, and the characters are fleshed out extremely well. ( )
  CatieN | Mar 30, 2009 |
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Amazon.com (ISBN 0671042548, Paperback)

Sara Swerdlow and Adam Langer are in many ways the ideal Manhattan pair. Their relationship is unvexed by the strains of sexual attraction, since both prefer men, and has even survived Adam's huge early success as "the gay Neil Simon." This couple, after all, can commiserate about lovers, talk about their favorite types, and ponder "the puzzlingly popular aesthetic of boxer shorts, which transformed all men into their uncles." Each August, along with their married friends Maddy and Peter, they rent the perfect Long Island wreck, complete with impossible landlady. Now that they're all 30, each is clinging to the last vestiges of youth--and a little concerned that Maddy and Peter's baby, not to mention Adam's new boyfriend, will alter the chemistry. But what no one can possibly know is that an accident will put Sara entirely out of the picture and bring her grieving, eccentric mother into it.

Killing off her ostensible heroine so early in Surrender, Dorothy may initially seem a bizarre undertaking, since Meg Wolitzer's fans would be more than content with her take on the foursome's summer holiday. The author, let's recall, is an expert social observer, and can turn a divinely comic phrase in her sleep. But in her fifth novel Wolitzer is aiming for more, and her expertly controlled scenes slide from charming farce to deeper melancholy. Set in a temporary summer rental, Surrender, Dorothy is really about the permanence of loss and revelation. --Kerry Fried

(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:17 -0400)

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