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Laura & Emma

di Kate Greathead

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
13620199,604 (3.34)4
"A tender, witty debut novel about a single mother raising her daughter among the upper crust of New York City society in the late twentieth century from a nine-time Moth StorySLAM champion. Laura hails from the Upper East Side of Manhattan, born into old money, drifting aimlessly into her early thirties. One weekend in 1981 she meets Jefferson. The two sleep together. He vanishes. And Laura realizes she's pregnant. Enter: Emma. Despite her progressive values, Laura raises Emma by herself in the same blue-blood world of private schools and summer homes she grew up in, buoyed by a host of indelible characters, including her eccentric mother, who informs her society friends and Emma herself that she was fathered by a Swedish sperm donor; her brother, whose childhood stutter reappears in the presence of their forbidding father; an exceptionally kind male pediatrician; and her overbearing best friend, whose life has followed the Park Avenue script in every way except for childbearing. Meanwhile, the apple falls far from the tree with Emma, who begins to question her environment in a way her mother never could. Told in vignettes that mine the profound from the mundane, with meditations on everything from sex and death to insomnia and the catharsis of crying on the subway, a textured portrait emerges of a woman struggling to understand herself, her daughter, and the changing landscape of New York City in the eighties and nineties. Laura & Emma is an acutely insightful exploration of class and family warfare from a new author whose offbeat sensibility, understated wit, and stylish prose celebrate the comedy and pathos that make us human"--… (altro)
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1 star.

This was the Belletrist book club title for the month of April and for the second time in a row, I'm was a bit disappointed.

I love the fact that this is marketed as a book that has a Gilmore Girls feel to it, however I found that this was certainly not the case; the only similarity between the two was the fact that the protagonist had a surprise pregnancy. While the beginning of the story held so much promise (i.e. who was the man who got her pregnant?), I felt like the plot fell very flat and nothing happened. ( )
  cbwalsh | Sep 13, 2023 |
Confession: I am a complete sucker for any novel featuring the rich white people of New York City doing stupid things. This is one of the best. Laura, heiress to a modest fortune and the most totally passive character I've ever come across, becomes pregnant by a "Six Degrees of Separation" type flimflam man and has the baby, Emma, because her cab takes too long getting crosstown for her abortion appointment. Ridiculous! And yet as the years peel along, Laura occasionally makes a decision (a move to a penthouse in almost Harlem, shopping in an actual bodega) and, by neglect and accidentally, Emma turns out to be a stubborn yet entrancing girl. The most amusing character is Laura's mother Bibs, archetype of a Lady Who Lunches, whose outrageous presence is necessary just to keep the entire work from being the equivalent of a long comfy nap in an upstairs room at a private club. So I'm afraid I am unable to morally justify my outsized pleasure at this very silly book. So what.

Quote: "For many women, planning a wedding became something much more: an opportunity for the universe to make good on all the ways in which the bride felt she'd been shortchanged in life." ( )
  froxgirl | Dec 26, 2018 |
I gobbled up this book in one day. Laura was such a real character, someone that you wouldn’t be able to get to know well if you met her in real life. Therefore, the access to her inner thoughts meant that much more. Emma’s quirky character also felt authentic, not prettied up so we would like her more. The upper crust life leant intrigue, but in the end, they are just like us with all of the same questions, worries, insecurities and faults. ( )
  LMJenkins | Nov 28, 2018 |
‘’You’re not supposed to cry when someone gives you a present.’’

Although I’m not actually a reader of what I call ‘’Family Conflict’’ novels, I cannot say ‘’no’’ to stories whose protagonists are single parents. I consider the women and men who decide to raise their children without a partner’s help, overcoming any social or financial obstacles, to be the bravest of the brave. When the novel is also set in New York, I’m bound to read it eagerly. And I was not disappointed.

The story centers around Laura, a bright, bookish young woman, who decides to let her defences down for a single night. The result is a baby girl, Emma. Laura decides to raise her daughter alone, since the father is a no-no case and from 1980 until 1995, we follow her development as a woman and a mother, we witness how the relationship with Emma evolves, we are a part of her dilemmas, hopes and frustrations. And let me tell you, ‘’frustration’’ isn’t an adequate word to describe the amount of idiocy of the people around poor Laura. Through her eyes, we also observe the changes not only of New York but of a whole era.

While the focus is on the mother-daughter relationship, Greathead enriches her story with a number of issues, controversial and thought-provoking. New York is always a character in very novel set in this fascinating city, but I was very intrigued by the writer’s choice to place her plot in the special, turbulent decades of the 80s and the 90s. The HIV nightmare and the witch-hunt against certain groups of people. The impact of the World Trade Center, the various stereotypes and discriminations concerning the upper and middle classes and the diversity of the people who populate New York. In my opinion, Greathead succeeded in presenting a well-written, balanced social commentary, especially on the social conventions that dictate how a single mother is basically an incomplete person and the difficulty of a large number of people to accept that not all of us need a partner or a husband. That some of us don’t consider romance and sex as necessary in order to live a meaningful, useful life. More often than not, life provides many advantages to those who refuse to place themselves under the yoke.

...Can you tell I am frightfully against the idea of marriage? But anyway...The dialogue is vivid, the narration flows as we are given snippets of daily life, with an array of colourful (but highly unsympathetic people) and even more colourful incidents. Those who claim that this is a WASP novel of New York elite? Well, they probably watch too many bad TV series. Projecting our own bias into our understanding of a story is simplistic and juvenile. The problem is we never bother to look deeper into a situation and we think that placing labels on everyone is enough to get it over with. This is a major theme in this novel.

I fully sympathised with Laura. She doesn’t accept the social restrictions and the etiquette of the so-called upper class. However, she doesn’t quite fit anywhere and her courage to stand up to her family’s questionable values is limited. But she tries, at least. She is a very good mother than noone seems to appreciate and I admit I wanted her stronger. I wanted her to punch all of her kin on their turned-up noses and tell them what’s what. Including her daughter who is one of the most revolting children I’ve seen on page. And believe me, I’ve had my full share of spoiled tiny humans over the years. Despite Laura’s efforts, Emma is selfish, spoiled, ungrateful, mean and never recognises her mother’s sacrifices for her. Much like her grandmother, actually.

This is a finely written novel on the notion of motherhood, the sacrifices, the joy and the fear, the unique bond between a mother and a daughter with all the ups and downs. A novel of character, elegance, of sadness, yet hopeful and vaguely optimistic. The only weakness? The lack of compelling characters with the exception of Laura. Definitely a recommended read and bound to be one of the most beautiful debuts of 2018.

Many thanks to Simon & Schuster and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange of an honest review.

My reviews can also be found on https://theopinionatedreaderblog.wordpress.com ( )
  AmaliaGavea | Jul 15, 2018 |
‘’You’re not supposed to cry when someone gives you a present.’’

Although I’m not actually a reader of what I call ‘’Family Conflict’’ novels, I cannot say ‘’no’’ to stories whose protagonists are single parents. I consider the women and men who decide to raise their children without a partner’s help, overcoming any social or financial obstacles, to be the bravest of the brave. When the novel is also set in New York, I’m bound to read it eagerly. And I was not disappointed.

The story centers around Laura, a bright, bookish young woman, who decides to let her defences down for a single night. The result is a baby girl, Emma. Laura decides to raise her daughter alone, since the father is a no-no case and from 1980 until 1995, we follow her development as a woman and a mother, we witness how the relationship with Emma evolves, we are a part of her dilemmas, hopes and frustrations. And let me tell you, ‘’frustration’’ isn’t an adequate word to describe the amount of idiocy of the people around poor Laura. Through her eyes, we also observe the changes not only of New York but of a whole era.

While the focus is on the mother-daughter relationship, Greathead enriches her story with a number of issues, controversial and thought-provoking. New York is always a character in very novel set in this fascinating city, but I was very intrigued by the writer’s choice to place her plot in the special, turbulent decades of the 80s and the 90s. The HIV nightmare and the witch-hunt against certain groups of people. The impact of the World Trade Center, the various stereotypes and discriminations concerning the upper and middle classes and the diversity of the people who populate New York. In my opinion, Greathead succeeded in presenting a well-written, balanced social commentary, especially on the social conventions that dictate how a single mother is basically an incomplete person and the difficulty of a large number of people to accept that not all of us need a partner or a husband. That some of us don’t consider romance and sex as necessary in order to live a meaningful, useful life. More often than not, life provides many advantages to those who refuse to place themselves under the yoke.

...Can you tell I am frightfully against the idea of marriage? But anyway...The dialogue is vivid, the narration flows as we are given snippets of daily life, with an array of colourful (but highly unsympathetic people) and even more colourful incidents. Those who claim that this is a WASP novel of New York elite? Well, they probably watch too many bad TV series. Projecting our own bias into our understanding of a story is simplistic and juvenile. The problem is we never bother to look deeper into a situation and we think that placing labels on everyone is enough to get it over with. This is a major theme in this novel.

I fully sympathised with Laura. She doesn’t accept the social restrictions and the etiquette of the so-called upper class. However, she doesn’t quite fit anywhere and her courage to stand up to her family’s questionable values is limited. But she tries, at least. She is a very good mother than noone seems to appreciate and I admit I wanted her stronger. I wanted her to punch all of her kin on their turned-up noses and tell them what’s what. Including her daughter who is one of the most revolting children I’ve seen on page. And believe me, I’ve had my full share of spoiled tiny humans over the years. Despite Laura’s efforts, Emma is selfish, spoiled, ungrateful, mean and never recognises her mother’s sacrifices for her. Much like her grandmother, actually.

This is a finely written novel on the notion of motherhood, the sacrifices, the joy and the fear, the unique bond between a mother and a daughter with all the ups and downs. A novel of character, elegance, of sadness, yet hopeful and vaguely optimistic. The only weakness? The lack of compelling characters with the exception of Laura. Definitely a recommended read and bound to be one of the most beautiful debuts of 2018.

Many thanks to Simon & Schuster and NetGalley for the ARC in exchange of an honest review. ( )
  AmaliaGavea | Jul 15, 2018 |
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To the memory of my grandmother Victoria Parsons Pennoyer, who untaught me everything
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Laura sometimes woke up in the night, rattled by thoughts she'd never have during the day.
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"A tender, witty debut novel about a single mother raising her daughter among the upper crust of New York City society in the late twentieth century from a nine-time Moth StorySLAM champion. Laura hails from the Upper East Side of Manhattan, born into old money, drifting aimlessly into her early thirties. One weekend in 1981 she meets Jefferson. The two sleep together. He vanishes. And Laura realizes she's pregnant. Enter: Emma. Despite her progressive values, Laura raises Emma by herself in the same blue-blood world of private schools and summer homes she grew up in, buoyed by a host of indelible characters, including her eccentric mother, who informs her society friends and Emma herself that she was fathered by a Swedish sperm donor; her brother, whose childhood stutter reappears in the presence of their forbidding father; an exceptionally kind male pediatrician; and her overbearing best friend, whose life has followed the Park Avenue script in every way except for childbearing. Meanwhile, the apple falls far from the tree with Emma, who begins to question her environment in a way her mother never could. Told in vignettes that mine the profound from the mundane, with meditations on everything from sex and death to insomnia and the catharsis of crying on the subway, a textured portrait emerges of a woman struggling to understand herself, her daughter, and the changing landscape of New York City in the eighties and nineties. Laura & Emma is an acutely insightful exploration of class and family warfare from a new author whose offbeat sensibility, understated wit, and stylish prose celebrate the comedy and pathos that make us human"--

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