Sunday's on the Phone to Monday
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
The Royal Tenenbaums meets J. D. Salinger in this “sharply observed and bittersweet family romance with a rock ’n’ roll heart” (Elle).
Claudio and Mathilde Simone, once romantic bohemians hopelessly enamored with each other, find themselves nestled in domesticity in New York, running a struggling vinyl record store and parenting three daughters as best they can: Natasha, an overachieving prodigy; sensitive Lucy, with her debilitating heart condition; and Carly, adopted from China and quietly fixated on her true origins.
With prose that is as keen and illuminating as it is whimsical and luminous, debut novelist Christine Reilly tells the unusual love story of this family. Poignant and humane, Sunday’s on the Phone to Monday is a deft exploration of the tender ties that bind families together, even as they threaten to tear them apart.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Reilly's debut novel explores how a love evolves as responsibilities mount for two parents with three very different daughters. The book starts with the courtship of Claudio and Mathilde in 1980s New York City, moves through their adult lives as they marry and settle into their careers Claudio runs a record shop, Mathilde is an actress and then in Part Two introduces their three daughters. For a first-time novelist, Reilly is deft in her characterizations; the main story lines, especially the daughters' young Natasha, Lucy, and adopted Carly are full of imaginative anecdotes and vibrant details. Ever-capitalized references to an abstraction known as Heart, representing the family's love, and the constant presence of rock tunes punctuate moments of heightened emotion at times too obviously. But Reilly's tidy, whimsical prose balances the long lapses into sentimentality. Although New York and classic rock create a strong sense of time and place, the heart of the novel arises from the intimacy among the sisters. They, like their parents, keep secrets, fight to protect one another, and make mistakes, eventually discovering that life can't be all YouTube videos and first kisses. Reilly's first novel is touching and nostalgic.
Customer Reviews
great book
I absolute adore Reilly’s handle of prose. The story is so real and drags you in, wanting to know more. Her characters are sweet and engaging. Recommend!
Sundays on the phone to Monday
Argh. What is with this author and the way she tells a story?Beyond frustrating. Skips all over the place. If you put the book down for more than a couple hours it's like you're reading another book when you pick it back up. Maybe it's not the author but the editor. Read about half of it before I realized how much this book was irritating the heck out me. What a sheer waste of my time and money.