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Five friends reunite for an intervention about one's cocaine addiction, and the whole group reflects on their lives as they turn thirty.

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9 reviews
I’ve read several of Tropper’s books. He specializes in the dysfunctional family. This one concerns four friends: our narrator, Ben, long in love with Lindsey, but just getting divorced from Sarah; Chuck, the Rogaine-using surgeon who can’t seem to get enough sex; Jack, a movie star with a bad cocaine habit, now estranged from them after they attempted a half-hearted intervention; and Allison, Jack’s sort of girlfriend.

But the worst thing is they’re turning thirty. “If I were a dog I’d be dead. Thirty . . . shit. It’s a nice round number to arrive at if you have it all together. Success, love, a family, the overall sense that you actually belong on the planet. If you have all that, you can wear thirty well. But if you show more don’t, it feels like you’ve missed the deadline, and suddenly your chances of ever getting it right, of ever achieving true happiness and fulfillment, are fading fast. . . Thirty . . . shit. Crows feet, jowls, love handles. I’ve started to see myself through the eyes of the teenagers I pass on the street, repeatedly shocked by the realization that they see me as older. So many of the things I’ve eaten with impunity for years suddenly give me indigestion. Nothing feels new anymore. Everything I see just reminds me of something else. I know now that there are certain things I’ll never do in my life. A shirt I still think of as new turns out to actually be seven or eight years old. Seasons are quicker, holidays vaguely disturbing. Statistically speaking, I’ve used up more than one third of my life span, the healthiest third. And where are the tradeoffs? Where’s the authority? The wisdom? The confidence that was supposed to have come with adulthood? I’m only experienced enough to know that I’m as clueless as I ever was.” (Man, would I love to be thirty again. My kids all thought thirty was death. Now they’re all approaching or are past forty, it’s a different story.)

Convinced they can only help Jack with drastic measures, they adopt Plan B. They kidnap him to get him out of his addiction. Then things get complicated. They realize their motivations weren’t quite what they professed. On the other hand, “The Scarecrow, Lion, and Tin Man weren’t just helping Dorothy for the hell of it. They all had their own reasons for wanting to see the Wizard.”

A very sweet book and thoroughly enjoyable. It has suspense, conflict, surprise, and humor. “That guy” Don told us when we greeted him on the porch, “got into the gene pool when the lifeguard wasn’t watching.” “He definitely has severe delusions of adequacy.”
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This book had a strong St. Elmo's Fire vibe to it (which is one of my favorite movies). It's about a group of close college friends, dealing with growing up and growing apart now that college is over. They are all thirty or about to turn thirty and are very angsty about it. At times I was rolling my eyes thinking, "Give me a break - thirty is not THAT big of a deal." But overall I liked all the characters and the relationships between them.
PLAN B starts ugly with Lindsey's 30th birthday party.

Eventual kidnapping of movie star Jack led to cocaine interventions
and his own unlikely escape resolution.

Ben's accident added nothing and slowed even the boring divorce plot details...

So Happy that the author moved quickly beyond this debut to truly hilarious dialogue!
Plan B had the same charm as Jonathan Tropper's other novels. I liked his characters as always and could relate to the lost feeling of turning thirty. Ben and his college friends are coming to terms with their actual lives and how they thought they would turn out. Tropper's novels are always funny and laced with pop culture references that make you smile.
Another funny book by Mr. Trooper. My second book read from his collection and I can't wait to read the rest. Witty, humorous and an overall good time. Having recently turned 30 myself I could empthaize with the characters as they all face a new chapter in their lives. Chuck was my favorite character as I could vividly imagine a similar friend of mine; balding, oversexed, overworked and clinging to his 20's like it was his job.
Another excellent book by Tropper - thought not my favorite of his. Tropper's dialogue always flows, and his characters thoughts are insightful. Tropper is always a recommended read-can't wait for the next realease since I have gone through all his books now.

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ThingScore 50
Despite Ben's exaggerated Gen-X voice--by turns jaded and facile, glib and bleak--the picaresque plot is diverting in a sitcom kind of way. The characters are unlikely as friends but entertaining as Friends, and Tropper keeps the story moving at a brisk pace with crackling TV dialogue.
Dec 24, 2012
added by Shortride
While Tropper clearly has a grasp on the pop culture he describes, he has a habit of comparing his characters’ situations to other fictions, from Star Wars to Three’s Company to the novels of Jay McInerney, which only emphasizes the pop-hodgepodge nature of his own writing. The characters, for all their angst and clever dialogue, are essentially flat, and the predictable denouement is no show more help. Reads like a fictionalization of TV’s Friends, but more earnest. show less
Jan 1, 2000
added by Shortride

Author Information

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12 Works 7,493 Members
Jonathan Tropper is the author of How to Talk to a Widower, Everything Changes, The Book of Joe, Plan B, and One Last Thing Before I Go. He adapted his novel, This Is Where I Leave You, into a feature film starring Jason Bateman and Tina Fey. He is an executive producer and co-creator of the Cinemax series Banshee. He teaches writing at show more Manhattanville College. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Plan B
Original title
Plan B
Original publication date
2000

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3570 .R5885 .P57Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
395
Popularity
78,617
Reviews
8
Rating
½ (3.69)
Languages
5 — Czech, English, German, Russian, Swedish
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
14
ASINs
2