Between husbands and friends

Nancy Thayer, 1943-

Book - 1999

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FICTION/Thayer, Nancy
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Subjects
Published
New York : St. Martin's Press 1999.
Language
English
Main Author
Nancy Thayer, 1943- (-)
Edition
First U.S. edition
Physical Description
241 pages
ISBN
9780312206130
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Thayer focuses on the 10-year friendship between Lucy West and Kate Cunningham and their husbands in her latest novel. Lucy narrates the novel, and she explains the beginnings of her marriage and her friendship with Kate in flashback chapters that are interspersed with her narrative of the present day. As Lucy and Kate become best friends, their husbands and their children get to know each other, and they become close as well. The families vacation together in Nantucket, in a house Lucy inherited from her aunt. To make things really interesting, Thayer squeezes as much tension, drama, and tragedy as she can into the novel. Lucy fantasizes about other men; that's fairly common, but does she need to be attracted to every man who walks by her? She also finds everything around her to be sensual, from glasses of iced tea to horse stables. Unfortunately, this soap-opera novel consists of one-dimensional characters moving from one emotion to the next only to find themselves in a very predictable plot. The root of the problem is Lucy's desire to break away, if only temporarily, from her responsibilities, to just once be "the bad girl" instead of the nurturing mother, the faithful wife. But Lucy makes one false step, and her family life is changed forever, as is her best friend, Kate. What could have been a solid story of female friendship is a melodrama of marriage and lust. --Michelle Kaske

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Two Massachusetts families live out a decade of births, deaths, secrets and infidelities in this moving 12th novel from Thayer (An Act of Love). Narrator Lucy West, 37, is a self-employed mother of two; her husband, Max, edits the local newspaper in Sussex, a Boston suburb. Suave, irreverent Kate Cunningham and her husband, Chip, an attorney, move to Sussex in 1987; Kate and Lucy meet at their children's preschool and become fast friends. Soon the couples summer together on Nantucket, and their lives grow ever more entwined. Thayer's narrative jumps back and forth between the couples' present and their shared past. One set of chapters follows the Wests and the Cunninghams from 1987 to 1991: during these years, Kate chafed in her unfulfilling marriage, Max becomes a depressed workaholic and Lucy, devastated by her stillborn baby, takes comfort in a brief affair with Chip. Other chapters relate the events of 1998, which test Lucy's marriage and friendship all over again. When her son, Jeremy (conceived in 1991), is diagnosed with cystic fibrosis, both couples must confront the chance that Chip, not Max, is Jeremy's real father. Readers prepared for the slow pace of Thayer's plot will appreciate her detailed, realistic records of motherhood, child-rearing and domestic routine in Sussex and Nantucket. The finale, set in Boston's Children's Hospital, will strike some as cathartic and fulfilling, others as pat and predictable. Yet thoughtful chronicles of female friendship (see The Book Borrower, above) always have appeal, and Thayer's twist on the relationship is sure and steady. Literary Guild and Doubleday Book Club alternates. (Sept.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

From the author of An Act of Love (1997), among others: a clear-eyed look at a friendship between two couples that almost implodes when a child becomes seriously ill and damaging secrets are revealed. Narrator Lucy West is married to Max and is the mother of 14-year-old Margaret and first-grader Jeremy. The Wests live in a small town, where Max is editor of the local newspaper, and life has mostly been good, but as Lucy begins her story, in June 1998, she's suffering from panic attacks. She's been offered a job with a prestigious ad agency in nearby Boston, and she fears that Max, who himself suffers from depression, might not be able to cope if she works full-time. As the summer progresses, Lucy finds she has to deal with even more disturbing problems, these detailed in chapters alternating with her recollections of the recent past. Lucy and Max are close friends with Kate and Chip Cunningham, parents of Matthew and Abby. The two women share confidences, their children are pals, the couples socialize and vacation together on Nantucket. As in all friendships, though, there are the inevitable moments of envy and competition. Lucy's memories of the early years of the West/Cunningham bond reveal one especially fraught period. Lucy had a stillborn baby, and grieving Max ignored his wife, who found it hard to be friends with Kate when she gave birth to Abby shortly thereafter. A brief affair with Chip revitalized Lucy and her marriage; soon after, she was pregnant with Jeremy. But when Jeremy is diagnosed in August 1998 with cystic fibrosis, a genetically caused disease, and the doctor suggests Max be tested, Lucy has to admit that Chip could also be the father. Will her confession end not just her friendship with Kate but her marriage? Can love and loyalty endure . . . even barely? Plot-driven, yes, but there's more than enough compensation in Thayer's insights into the tangled webs woven by friendship. (Literary Guild alternate selection)

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.