Tag Archives: dysfunctional family

Book Review: Where’d You Go Bernadette

Where’d You Go Bernadette by Maria Semple (pub date 8/14/12)

“A little social anxiety never hurt anyone, am I right?”

We all know a “Bernadette.”  She’s the one who doesn’t join in with the rest of the group, the one who chooses not to adhere to social convention, the one too smart and too interesting for the room.  She’s the one you might think is weird, but might surprise you if you got to know her.  In this novel, author Maria Semple introduces us to just such a character.

Bernadette Fox is a wealthy wife and mother living in Seattle.  Her husband is an executive at Microsoft and their teenage daughter, Bee, is a gifted student about to move across the country to an exclusive boarding school.  But just below the surface, Bernadette is a wreck.  A once-successful architect and still a legend in the field, she left her profession suddenly and moved from Los Angeles to Seattle.  This turn of events led her to become increasingly agoraphobic, anxious, and socially awkward.  She would become a nuisance for the other mothers at Bee’s private school, a worry to her husband, and a neighbor from Hell.  Then one day, shortly before she was supposed to take a family trip to Antarctica, Bernadette suddenly vanishes.

The story is told largely from Bee’s point of view, as she tries to discover the cause behind her mother’s disappearance.  The point of the story is not only finding out where Bernadette went physically, but emotionally as well.  What would cause a successful career woman and recipient of a genius grant to suddenly give up her profession?  Why would a someone who spent her life creating beautiful buildings choose to live in a dilapidated house and let it fall further into disrepair?  Why does everyone judge her so harshly?

Where’d You Go Bernadette is delightful.  I absolutely loved this book; I read the first third and the entire second half in one sitting each.  It’s an absorbing character study and a wicked satire of wealthy Seattle society and Microsoft corporate culture.  Hilarious is some parts and touching in others, it’s a book that can be enjoyed by many different audiences.  Until now, I wasn’t aware that Semple wrote for Arrested Development (and other shows), but I can definitely see the resemblance in the dialogue and writing style.  I would recommend this book to just about anyone.  Bernadette is a character you won’t be able to get out of your head for a long time!

Book Review: Tigers in Red Weather

Tigers in Red Weather by Liza Klaussmann (pub date 7/17/12)

“Houses, husbands, and midnight gin parties. . . Nothing’s going to change.  Not in any way that really matters.  It will be like always.”

I love novels about dysfunctional families, probably because it’s nice to think that there are families more messed up than my own.  I kid, I kid.  But for me there’s something so satisfying about a book in which family secrets are slowly revealed, and the characters show their true selves.

Tigers in Red Weather is just such a book.  Set in post-World War II America, Tigers tells the story of cousins Nick and Helena and twenty years of their family drama.  At the beginning of the novel, Nick and Helena are having one last drink together before they separate for the first time in their lives.  The cousins are moving away to join their respective husbands: Helena is moving to Hollywood to marry the enterprising Avery, while Nick is moving to Florida to live with her Navy veteran husband Hughes.

Little do they know that that night might be the last time they were truly happy.  After years of disenchantment with marriage and motherhood, Nick and Helena find themselves changed, and find their once close relationship strained beyond recognition.  The rest of the novel takes place in the family’s cherished summer home on Martha’s Vineyard, known as Tiger House.  Things change for Nick and Helena when their twelve-year-old children, Daisy and Ed, discover the body of a murder victim on the island.  That one event shakes the family to its core, uncovering years of resentment, secrets, and infidelities.

The book tells the story from the separate viewpoints of the five main characters and jumps around in the timeline, going back and forth between the 1940s, 1959, and 1967.  The changing perspectives and non-linear storytelling help build the drama and give the reader a more complete understanding of the book’s events.

While I enjoyed Tigers in Red Weather very much, it wasn’t quite what I expected it to be.  The plot description would have you believe that kids finding the dead body was the main plot point, but it was really just a catalyst that leads to this family’s undoing.  But with its great writing and well thought out characters, I was far from disappointed.  This is another example in which the characters make the story, and that story is definitely intense and at times disturbing.

With an air of mystery and a touch of faded glamour, Tigers is a great dramatic story.  A perfect summer read for those looking for an alternative to the usual “beach reads.”