Musical chairs A novel

Amy Poeppel

Book - 2020

Bridget and Will have the kind of relationship that people envy: they're loving, compatible, and completely devoted to each other. The fact that they're strictly friends seems to get lost on nearly everyone; after all, they're as good as married in (almost) every way. For three decades, they've nurtured their baby, the Forsyth Trio - a chamber group they created as college students - but now their beloved trio is missing its violinist and floundering. Bridget has been dreaming of spending the summer at her rustic Connecticut country home with her boyfriend, sterling. But her plans are suddenly upended when he breaks up with her over email, and then her twin twenty-something children arrive unannounced, filling her empty ...nest with their big dogs, dirty laundry, and respective crises.--Dust jacket flap.

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Subjects
Genres
Humorous fiction
Domestic fiction
Published
New York : Emily Bestler Books/Atria 2020.
Language
English
Main Author
Amy Poeppel (author)
Edition
First Emily Bestler Books/Atria Books hardcover edition
Physical Description
x, 405 pages ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781501176418
9781501176425
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Cellist Bridget and pianist Will are about to bring a new violinist into the Forsyth Trio, but first they need to survive the summer. Bridget decamps to Connecticut to spend some time with her novelist boyfriend, but he breaks up with her via email, leaving her alone in a house that is literally falling apart around her. Soon, unexpected company arrives: her daughter, Isabelle, who has quit her lucrative job, and her son, Oscar, who suspects that his husband is cheating. Next comes the news that her 90-year-old father, a legendary orchestral conductor, is planning to remarry. Then Will shows up for his usual visit, where he falls in love with a woman who is as committed to country life as he is to city life. These ingredients lead to a charming comedy of errors full of unexpected revelations and unusual events. Poeppel's (Limelight, 2018) lighthearted family story casts a thoughtful eye on the intricacies of relationships while exploring the intersection of art and life. Readers of upmarket ensemble fiction with a dash of humor, à la Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney or Emma Straub, will enjoy Poeppel's latest.

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

Poeppel (Small Admissions) charms with this witty small-town story. Cellist Bridget Stratton's original plan to spend a carefree summer with her boyfriend at her dilapidated Connecticut country house is blown to pieces when her boyfriend breaks up with her via email, her 20-something twin children land on her doorstep, and her father, a famous, elderly orchestra conductor, announces he's getting married. Luckily she has Will, her longtime best friend, with whom she founded her chamber group, the Forsythe Trio, at Juilliard, which is still active decades later despite the loss early on of the original violinist, Gavin Glantz. The group's effort to court a new member causes friction, while Bridget continues to wonder if the twins' father is her sperm donor or Gavin, whom she slept with the night before she was artificially inseminated. Poeppel's characters leap off the page, and as the plot bubbles along, the lingering question of the twins' parentage is answered, and a rather unexpected solution is found for the Trio's problems. Comedic relief is provided by an errant herd of sheep, a feisty parrot named Ronaldo, and the epically awful wedding-wear presented to Bridget for her father's wedding. Poeppel's whimsical tale offers plenty of surprises. Agent: Linda Chester, Linda Chester Literary. (July)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Award-winning Métis author Dimaline makes her debut with an American publisher, Empire of Wild, the edgy story of Joan, heard fighting vituperatively with her now missing husband, who believes she spots him posing as a charismatic preacher in a battered revival tent (75,000-copy first printing). The youngest winner ever of Italy's prestigious Premio Strega, Giordano (The Solitude of Prime Numbers) returns with Heaven and Earth to limn the enduring bonds linking Teresa to three young men she meets one summer in Puglia, her father's childhood home. From debuter Mackenzie, a Commonwealth Short Story Prize winner, One Year of Ugly (60,000-copy first printing) takes a humorous approach to recount the travails of a Venezuelan family living illegally in Trinidad. A best-selling author in mass market, McKinlay moves into trade paperback original with Paris Is Always a Good Idea, the story.` of a young woman who revisits her gap year in Ireland, France, and Italy, looking for lost loves but finding something different. In the No. 1 New York Times best-selling Macomber's A Walk Along the Beach, shy Willa--especially close to sister Harper after their mother's death--is ready to follow Harper's advice about risking love until tragedy befalls Harper. Martin returns after his high-flying debut, Early Work, with the story collection Cool for America about the gap between what people want and what they achieve. Winner of the Terry Southern Prize, Nugent shows us all the stumbling antics of near-adults in Fraternity. In Poeppel's Musical Chairs, Bridget and Will hatch a plan to lure shining-star violinist Gavin Glantz back to their Forsyth Trio, which they founded together as Juilliard students, even as Bridget wrestles with multiple family complications (40,000-copy first printing).

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Now that her adult children are safely ensconced in their lives, a Manhattan cello player has a summer of romance planned at her Connecticut weekend home with her boyfriend. It does not work out as planned. Bridget Stratton, daughter of globally renowned conductor Edward Stratton, is an excellent musician in her own right. She is also a single mother to two grown children, twins Isabelle and Oscar, and sister to Gwen, the well-known host of a Netflix series. With her children busy with their own careers, she has a relaxing summer in rural Connecticut planned with her boyfriend. But instead, both her children show up with different crises, much to her surprise, and her boyfriend breaks up with her--gently, politely--via email. Her embarrassment runs deep. Will, her long-term friend and partner in the chamber music trio they created three decades prior, comes from Manhattan to Connecticut to be a shoulder to lean on and, while visiting, falls for a local woman. On one level, this is a story of deep friendship between Bridget and Will. It is also a story of motherhood, of daughterhood, and of sisterhood--when to help, when to let go, and when to celebrate. It is also a story of fixing up a house. A story of music. A story of aging. A story of being scared to change and yet still wanting to. And a story of falling in love. There is a large cast of characters, but they are all distinct individuals with their own personalities and voices who work together seamlessly in the novel as both soloists and supporting characters. Author Poeppel has created a story that is well thought out, well plotted, well written, and fully developed. A delightful novel that celebrates the messiness and joy to be found in real life. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Chapter 1 1 Halfway up the leafy, winding driveway, past the grove of ferns that were beginning to unfurl along the rubbly wall, Bridget's station wagon hit a pothole. The grocery bags on the passenger seat tipped over, sending lemons and onions rolling around on the floor of the car, while one of the suitcases slid from the top of the pile and smacked against the back hatch, upsetting the cats in their carriers. Bridget slowed down. Next to one of the granite boulders was a downed tree, directly under the electrical lines, that had left a debris field all the way to the spot where the driveway forked, the woodsier side leading to the guesthouse, a small Hansel-and-Gretel cottage with gingerbread trim and peeling white shutters. Bridget took the slightly more manicured route, startling a bunch of turkeys by the edge of the forest as she approached, making them scatter like teenagers busted at a keg party. She turned off the car in front of her clapboard weekend house, grateful to stop the sound from both the engine and the radio, which was playing a version of Beethoven's Fifth that was so bad she hadn't been able to stop listening to it. Bridget opened the car door to a preferable sound: the chirping and croaking of every horny amphibian in and around the pond. She looked into the backseat, where her cello was securely wedged in, and geared up to start carrying the full load she'd packed for the summer into the house, but her phone rang before she could even get out of the car to stretch her legs. The cats meowed in protest. "I think I have a cavity," Isabelle said. "Hi to you, too. You have a toothache?" "The whole left side of my face hurts. Where are you?" "I just got to the house and spooked a gaggle of turkeys," Bridget said. "The weather's looking a little iffy--" "A rafter of turkeys. Don't even tell me; I'm so jealous. So, I woke up with this throbbing pain, and I have to go to work. What do I do?" "Compresses," Bridget told her grown daughter, who was over six thousand miles away. "Gargle with warm water and salt and take Tylenol. Can you make an appointment to see a dentist during your lunch break?" "I want to go to Dr. Herndon, not some random--" "You can't wait a year to fill a cavity." "You think I should come home?" Isabelle asked, as if that were a completely reasonable question. "There are excellent dentists there. Did you eat breakfast?" It always amazed Bridget to think that in Hong Kong, Isabelle was already experiencing tomorrow. "I can't chew." "Have a yogurt." "I wonder if it's my wisdom teeth; I should have gotten them out in college like everyone else." Isabelle's voice came into focus, and Bridget could tell she'd been taken off speakerphone: "Have you talked to Oscar, like in the past couple of days?" "I've texted him." Bridget was having a tough time negotiating a pattern of communication with her newlywed son. She didn't want to be overbearing, but she certainly didn't want to seem uninterested in the details of his life. She was interested, very much so, in fact. Were weekly calls acceptable? And should she try calling Matt also? Or was it okay that she usually reached out to Oscar, leaving messages since her calls often went to voicemail? They both worked all the time. "You should call him," said Isabelle. "Cold compresses or hot?" "Is your face swollen?" There was a pause as Isabelle, presumably, consulted a mirror. "Not really." "Hot then," said Bridget. She got out of the car, noticing how damp and warm the air was, how good it smelled, and opened the door to the backseat. "Trust your instincts; they've always been excellent." "I'm fine, don't worry." And then she added, "It's just that, I sometimes wonder what I'm even doing here. I feel like I'm not living my best life, or maybe I mean the right life." Isabelle sighed. "I miss you." That last sentiment made Bridget feel even worse than the thought of her daughter suffering a toothache. "I miss you, too, but this all seems perfectly normal. You're adjusting to a new place. You'll be great as soon as you settle in and make some friends." "Are you coming to visit?" The cats were scratching at the bars of their carriers. "I don't have our fall schedule yet. It depends on our new violinist, who--" "Oops, crud, it's almost seven. I gotta go to work." "See a dentist," Bridget said. "Love you." She got her cello case out of the backseat and put the straps over her shoulders, reaching back into the car awkwardly to get the cats. She carried them to the front door, looking out across the field to the barn in the distance. It was surprisingly dusky, the evening providing a dim filter that flattered her well-worn home. There was a low rumble overhead, and the sky darkened. First nights in the country by herself were always spooky, and this one was no exception. Bridget's heart raced with every creak and rattle, and the noises were constant, thanks to the torrential rain and terrified cats. She kept wishing her kids were sleeping upstairs, that Will was reading in the loft, or--even better--that Sterling was in her bed, telling her how overjoyed he was to be there, even in a typhoon. In the middle of the night, during the worst of the storm, the lightning split a big branch off the willow tree and left it for dead in the pond. Heavy winds pressed on the backside of the tennis court fence until the rotted cedar posts fell over, taking the chain link with them. When Bridget woke up the next morning, having barely slept all night, the temperature had dropped fifteen degrees, and there were deer grazing on the weeds that grew between the deep cracks in the asphalt court. With three sides of the fence still up, it looked like she'd opened a petting zoo. It was early, and Bridget had over four hours before she had to look presentable, so she threw on sweatpants and sneakers with the T-shirt she'd slept in. Before brushing her teeth or her hair, she went to the kitchen, where the old Sub-Zero was buzzing loudly in the background. She made small talk with the cats, Eliza (as in Doolittle) and Henry (as in Higgins). While the coffee brewed, she turned on NPR to drown out the racket coming from the fridge and texted her boyfriend in New York, knowing how much better she would sleep once he was under the same roof: Beautiful, sunny morning! Can't wait for you to get here :) She added a heart emoji. Sterling answered right away: Read your email. And then: Please. His clipped, businesslike tone grated, but he was right to be annoyed. Sterling was a novelist, and he'd asked her to proofread the foreword he'd written for a Cambridge University Press book on literary symbolism. She was certainly no expert on the topic, but she was a good and careful reader. Unfortunately, she'd let that task, along with a slew of other pressing matters, go undone that week while she was preparing her Upper West Side apartment for summer subletters. They were acquaintances of Sterling, his Dutch publisher, her husband, and their sixteen-year-old daughter. The family had arrived safely the night before--notifying her with a text that her place was smaller than they'd expected--at the same time that Bridget was discovering that an industrious mouse had spent the winter nesting in her underwear drawer. Bridget pulled on a sweater she found draped over a chair, fed the cats, and ate a handful of stale granola. Alone in the Connecticut house, she wouldn't have to think about feeding anyone other than herself and the cats. That would all change when Sterling arrived, but for the next two weeks, she could eat whatever she wanted at whatever time she chose without sitting down or even using a plate if she didn't feel like it. In the early evening she could stand at the kitchen counter--in the same spot where she'd dutifully cut up watermelon and poured glasses of milk for her kids when they were young--drinking wine and scooping pub cheese onto crackers and calling it dinner. She decided to go outside to assess the storm damage, and on her way to the front door, she noticed a puddle directly under the skylight. That was unfortunate. Looking up to see where the water was coming from, she saw a brown stain on the lower left corner, nothing too serious. She got a beach towel and dropped it on the floor. Opening the door, she let her city cats run out after her. They dropped to the ground like a rookie SWAT team as they took in the scent of bears and bobcats in the woods and hawks overhead. Dozens of downed branches, still holding on to their tiny green leaves, were discarded all over the lawn. On the tree limb that was now floating in the middle of the pond, four turtles were sunbathing. The grass was soaked, the pond was full, and the wind was cool. The storm might have wreaked havoc, but it had left everything gloriously clean. The peace was disrupted by the sound of a pickup truck coming up the long, wet driveway and making a sharp turn in front of the garage. The driver turned off the engine and opened his door. Her caretaker, Walter, stepped out slowly, reaching back to the passenger seat for a carton of eggs before walking over to her in the yard. "Thought I'd come see how you made out last night," he said. Bridget had never quite adjusted to the idea of unannounced visitors, but she'd learned long ago that locals had a different code of conduct from weekenders. Walter stopped to peer up at her roof, putting an arthritic hand up to shade his eyes. He was tall and skinny, wearing jean shorts hiked up with a belt and a red T-shirt tucked in, giving him the look of a knobby-kneed, overgrown toddler. As caretaker of the property for the past fifteen years, Walter had repeatedly alerted Bridget to problems with her house. He would call her in New York--in the middle of a meeting, a rehearsal, a concert--to report bad news: You got ice dams on the roof. There's a litter of baby squirrels in the attic. The heat's out in the guest cottage. It was up to Bridget to do something about these problems, and she tended to postpone repairs. She had, of course, addressed the direst issues, but she'd allowed all cosmetic or even mildly structural problems to fall by the wayside. The result was a wonderfully lived-in, cozy, but shabby home that could use a fresh coat of paint, a new hot water heater, and an exterminator. He showed her the egg carton. "From our chickens." "Thanks." But instead of handing the carton over, he held on to it, pointing his finger at the bushes. "Be careful with those cats. We don't let ours out. They kill the birds. It's a big year for bears, you know." "Is that right." "And foxes and coyotes'll kill cats, too. Seen any herons?" he asked. "Not yet," she said. "They'll eat your fish." It was hard to know in Walter's worldview which predators were bad and which were good. One minute he was cursing the herons for eating the smallmouth bass in his pond, but the next he was cheering the bobcat for catching a rabbit. Bridget tried to avoid such topics since they rarely saw eye to eye: she felt happy for the heron and bad for the bunny, for example. "Your kids coming to visit?" "Too busy," Bridget said. "Isabelle moved to Hong Kong and works sixty hours a week, and Oscar rarely leaves DC." "How's that friend of his?" "Husband," Bridget corrected. Bridget was humble by nature, but she couldn't help but speak well of her twins and son-in-law. "Matt's working for a congressman now, as his chief of staff." "A Democrat?" Walter said, frowning. "Jackson Oakley. The young star of the party." Politics, also a world of fighting animals, was another topic Bridget knew better than to discuss with Walter. "When's Bill coming? Haven't seen him in a while." No one, but no one, called Will, her oldest friend and music colleague, "Bill" other than Walter, and he had insisted on using the nickname for years in spite of frequent attempts to retrain him. "I'm not sure. Will's pretty busy this summer in New York, and our trio's on a break until our new violinist starts--" "Uh-oh," Walter said slowly, catching sight of the tennis court. "Oh, boy, would you look at that." He shook his head. "You gotta fix that in a hurry, or the rest of the fence is coming down with it." "Yeah, well," Bridget said, "we don't play much tennis anyway." "You want Kevin to come take a look?" He seemed fixated on the fence, while Bridget was certain that the big rocks protruding through the asphalt all over the court were a much bigger impediment to the game. "I thought he moved to Maine." "He came back home," Walter said, pointing vaguely to the north. "He's living with his mom just up the road." Bridget shuddered; Walter's grandson Kevin was a few years older than the twins. Was it possible he was already thirty? "Kevin can come by," he said, "give you a quote for some new cedar posts. And then maybe..." He glanced across the overgrown field at the old board-and-batten barn. ("Bird-and-bat barn" was the misnomer Isabelle had used as a child, and then more recently "Batshit Barn" was the nickname Oscar had given it, an appropriate moniker given the neglected structure's broken windows, rickety stairs, and shitting bat squatters.) "...Maybe it's time you take on that big project?" Walter said. Bridget adored the barn, the steep roof, the silo, the muted gray paint. "Grand" and "historic" were the words the Realtor had used to describe the eighteenth-century building when she'd bought the property, but after another two decades of decay, even Bridget had taken to saying things like Batshit Barn lost a lot of shingles this winter . The truth was, Bridget hadn't dared look inside in a decade. It looked like it needed a demolition team rather than a renovation expert, but Bridget couldn't even imagine. Who was she to tear down a barn that had made it through over 220 Connecticut winters? "Maybe someday I'll restore it," she said. "Kevin's got time to help you out this summer. He's working part-time for the park and rec commission. Trail maintenance and the like." Bridget figured outdoor work might suit Kevin well. Lacking muscle tone and snappy synapses, he looked like he belonged in the woods, carrying an axe over his shoulder, bootlaces untied. Bridget had often worried about him when he was a young, chubby-handed, nearsighted, excessively drooly child; he'd believed in Santa Claus until he was twelve. "I'll think about it," she said, hoping Walter didn't plan on chitchatting much longer. She wanted to put clean sheets on her bed, arrange flowers in a vase on the kitchen counter, clear off the desk in Will's loft to give Sterling a proper writing space, and buy a case of wine. As if he were reading her mind, Walter said, "So you don't need me stopping by? You'll be around?" "With my boyfriend," said Bridget. "He's never been here before, and I think he's going to fall in love with the place." She didn't mention that she was hoping to see if her relationship with Sterling might get bumped to the next level. Sterling had an eleven-year-old daughter who was heading off to sleepaway camp for eight weeks, and they were going to spend all that time together, a summer of romance, quiet, and privacy. So, no, she didn't want anyone stopping by. "I hope your new guy's handier than Bill--" " Will. " "--because you need to clean out your flues." Bridget couldn't quite picture Sterling as a chimney sweep. "I sort of doubt it." "Well, enjoy the summer." He walked back to his truck, saying, "They say we'll be getting a lot of rain." "Thanks for the eggs," she called after him. She turned to go back in the house, standing in the doorway while the cats made up their minds whether they wanted to come in or stay out. Eliza Doolittle decided to come in, while Henry Higgins stayed out. Bridget walked under the leaky skylight in the entry, through the living room, and into the kitchen. She needed to shower and get dressed in decent clothes before she went to her lunch, but her laptop was sitting in the center of the table in the breakfast room, as if to say, Pssst, remember me? She sat down and opened her email; right at the top, above a message from her sister, Gwen, was a new email from Sterling, with the subject line Airflow? She started reading, something about allergens and his need for a fan that made a nice breeze but wasn't too loud, but before she could get any further, the battery gave out and her computer went dead. She got up and found her power cord, leaned over, and reached for the outlet under the window. A flash of heat rushed up the length of her arm, all the way to her heart, and--just as the wind had shoved the tennis court fence onto the ground--an electric shock knocked her flat onto the floor. After driving to the Sharon Hospital, Bridget found herself lying on a gurney, hooked up to an EKG, with a red streak running from her hand to her elbow. "We'll get you out of here," the nurse said. "Just taking precautions." Bridget closed her eyes and pretended she was getting a facial. "What's your name, hon," the nurse said, verifying that the person in front of her matched the chart on her laptop. She was wearing eggplant-colored scrubs with bright pink Crocs, an outfit that clashed with itself and the peach-colored walls. She was a cheerful creature, making Bridget feel as though her electrocution had absolutely made her day. "Bridget Stratton." "Date of birth?" "June third, 19--" A quick inhale. "I don't suppose you're related to Edward Stratton?" The nurse was looking down at her with excitement. "No." "He's from England, they say, but he's got a house around here." "No kidding." "Our local celebrity." Bridget pointed and flexed, pointed and flexed her feet. "Even at his age," the nurse said, happily nodding her head, "they say he's got that... appeal, you know. He's still got it." Staring at the ceiling, Bridget listened to the EKG machine as it beeped an A, at the same pulse of that Pachelbel piece she'd always hated. "Your blood pressure's high," the nurse said, sounding pleased. "Thanks," said Bridget. "No, I mean you should keep an eye on it, watch your diet. Are you exercising?" The doctor came in past the pastel room divider, saving Bridget from having to answer. He studied her results, took off his glasses, and told Bridget she could go home. She sat up and turned so she was facing him, ready to get the stickers off her chest. The nurse began detaching the wires. "This happened at work?" the doctor asked. "She was at home ," said the nurse. The doctor looked at her like he felt sorry for her. "You should have an electrician check out your wiring." Lifting her arm, he turned her wrist over and examined the streak. "A shock like that can kill you." He got his prescription pad and scribbled on it as Bridget wondered what painkillers or relaxants he was giving her. She didn't feel like she needed anything but had no intention of turning down meds. "Braxton & Sons," he said, handing her the prescription with the name of a local electrician. "They did my outside lighting, and the whole entry is much more inviting." He looked down at the e-chart again. "Stratton? Say, are you--" "No relation," the nurse said, sounding disappointed. "Too bad," said the doctor. "What a guy; I'll never forget hearing him conduct Gershwin in Central Park. Did you know the queen's a big fan? They say he has a standing invitation to Buckingham Palace." Release papers in hand, Bridget walked out to her car and sent a quick text to Will: Got electrocuted in the breakfast room :) He answered immediately: Jeeesh!! That house!!!!!! You okay???? His excessive use of punctuation amused her; for someone so reserved, his text messages were highly expressive. She drove to the main intersection in the town of Sharon and sat at the light, admiring the old stone clock tower with its pointy red roof. She wished the clock said it was eight in the morning so she could start the day over again. She wished she'd at least taken a shower. The car behind her honked. She waved in apology, made a left turn, and drove to her father's house. Excerpted from Musical Chairs: A Novel by Amy Poeppel All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.