From Library Journal
National Book Award winner Gilchrist (author, most recently, of Courts of Love, LJ 9/15/96) has blessed her followers with another entertaining work of fiction. It presents a complex cast?not the least of these being the central character for whom the novel is named. At fiftysomething, Sarah is a high-powered editor at Time magazine and a successful novelist. At the novel's beginning, a childhood friend has died, and an old love?the husband of that friend?has reentered her life. What seems like an easy opportunity to rekindle an old flame is more akin to mixing fire and gasoline. Gilchrist leads readers between past and present in Sarah's life and explores the marked differences between her dynamic, stressful, urban existence in both New York City and Paris and the possibility of a suburban albeit more emotionally complex life in Nashville. For general fiction collections.?Faye A. Chadwell, Univ. of Oregon, EugeneCopyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
The New York Times Book Review, Patrick Giles
In her 15th book, Ellen Gilchrist offers the story of a woman charting the middle passages of a rich and turbulent life. Sarah Conley is an editor at Time magazine and a successful novelist, but her progress is checked by her unresolved past: as the novel opens, an old love for her best friend's husband is rekindled.... Unfortunately, while Gilchrist raises themes worthy of good fiction, she develops them with strategies better suited to soap opera.
From Booklist
Readers of good fiction love Gilchrist's books for their feisty heroines, complex emotional predicaments, supple humor, and suspense. Her newest novel seems to promise all of the above, but somehow, Sarah Conley, Gilchrist's latest strong-minded woman narrator, leaves us cold. It could be because she's so aloof, controlling, ambitious, and vain, but the real problem lies in Gilchrist's drift into the oversimplification of pop romance. Instead of psychology, social commentary, or reflections on the human spirit, we get a tallying of items such as designer clothes, luxury automobiles, expensive jewels, and extravagant homes. The plot, too, is hackneyed. Sarah and her best friend, Eugenie (both beautiful, blond, and brilliant), marry two handsome brothers, although both are in love with Jack. Eugenie saw him first, and they stay together after Sarah's marriage falls apart and she loses custody of her son. Sarah channels her anger into a couple of successful novels and a career in journalism. Long out of touch with Eugenie and Jack, she enters her fifth decade as an editor at Time and the sugar momma for a guy in his early thirties. Then Eugenie dies, Sarah and Jack immediately become lovers, and Jack buys an engagement ring, ready for wife number two. But Sarah has been offered the opportunity of a lifetime: several months in Paris to write a screenplay for a big-money Hollywood movie. Will she and Jack work it out? Do we care? Sarah insists that she isn't selling out. Maybe not, but it sure feels as though Gilchrist has. Donna Seaman
From Kirkus Reviews
The 13th work of fiction from Gilchrist (The Courts of Love, 1996, etc.), who here tries to give the standard midlife crisis story some fresh vigor by dropping a suddenly eligible old flame into the cast of characters. Sarah Conley is nothing if not driven. The only offspring of a poor Kentucky family, she managed to support her mother and herself after her father's death while she was still a child--and went on to turn an afterschool job as copygirl at a small-town newspaper into a journalistic career that eventually takes her all the way to Manhattan, where she ends up as an editor of Time. Glamorous, accomplished, and quite self-satisfied, Sarah juggles her career and social life without much effort, and has pretty much gotten over the absence of her son, whose custody she lost in the course of her recent divorce. Then, however, an unexpected summons from Eugenie, an ailing childhood friend, catches her off-guard, and she returns to Kentucky to discover that Eugenie is not merely sick but dying. Eugenie is married to Jack, whom Sarah always loved and who himself fell in love with Sarah after he'd become engaged to Eugenie. And now Sarah and Jack, after an absence of years, feel once more the same passion. Jack pursues Sarah this time around, following her all the way to Paris (where she goes after her final visit with Eugenie) to plead his case. Will love triumph in the end? Can passion be put on hold? And is it really possible to go home again, after all? The most familiar and best-loved potboiler quandaries take on new life under Gilchrist's direction, lending a good deal of shading (if not depth) to a fairly unoriginal plot. In the end, well-turned-out but unremarkable. Gilchrist keeps you in the palm of her hand when she tells a story, even if it's one that won't be remembered half an hour after it's over. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.
Sarah Conley FROM THE PUBLISHER
When Sarah Conley, a celebrated magazine editor and writer in New York City, returns home to the South to visit an ailing childhood friend, she finds herself forced to choose between pursuing her career and rekindling her relationship with the man she has long considered the love of her life. In a novel widely praised for its energy, passion, and wit, Ellen Gilchrist brings into brilliant focus the quandaries that arise when we realize our heart's desire.
FROM THE CRITICS
Publishers Weekly
Fans who have become a bit tired of the inbred, eccentric cast of characters who generally inhabit Gilchrist's short stories and novels will find the protagonist of this novel to be refreshingly new psychological territory. At 52, Sarah Conley is a successful journalist (a senior editor at Time) and an NBA winner (she wrote a roman clef that antagonized the boon companions of her youth). Bright, independent and focused, Sarah has ruthlessly pursued fulfillment as a writer. She divorced after six years of an early marriage and as a result lost custody of her son (whose paternity is in doubt) to her ex-husband, who is the brother of the man Sarah has always loved, Jack McAllenwho married Sarah's best friend, Eugenie Moore. Now Jack calls Sarah to tell her that Eugenie is dying. Sarah flies to Nashville, where she sees Eugenie one last time and feels again the passion for Jack that derailed her life once before. When she goes to Paris to write a screenplay and Jack pursues her, Sarah fears that she must make a choice between her high-powered career and the needs of her heart. It is here that Sarah may begin to grate on readers: she is just too smart, good-looking, sexy and successful, and even her dilemma lacks the drama to make her completely appealing. On the positive side, the narrative is energized by Gilchrist's comments on contemporary life, including some swipes at ethics at Time and in the movie industry. The dynamics of relationships, always her forte, have a new depth as her characters look back on the self-centered optimism of youth from the vantage point of middle-age, having become aware of their mortality, the diminishing opportunities for love and the compromises that occur in every life, no matter how fortunate. The quirky cadences of Gilchrist's prose and her witty, dialogue (though her characters talk like no one else except other Gilchrist characters) are present here in abundance. But the most salient aspect of this novel is its recognition that the past can't be revoked and the future will arrive no matter what one decides. (Sept.)
Library Journal
National Book Award winner Gilchrist (author, most recently, of Courts of Love, LJ 9/15/96) has blessed her followers with another entertaining work of fiction. It presents a complex castnot the least of these being the central character for whom the novel is named. At fiftysomething, Sarah is a high-powered editor at Time magazine and a successful novelist. At the novel's beginning, a childhood friend has died, and an old lovethe husband of that friendhas reentered her life. What seems like an easy opportunity to rekindle an old flame is more akin to mixing fire and gasoline. Gilchrist leads readers between past and present in Sarah's life and explores the marked differences between her dynamic, stressful, urban existence in both New York City and Paris and the possibility of a suburban albeit more emotionally complex life in Nashville. For general fiction collections.Faye A. Chadwell, Univ. of Oregon, Eugene
Kirkus Reviews
The 13th work of fiction from Gilchrist (The Courts of Love, 1996, etc.), who here tries to give the standard midlife crisis story some fresh vigor by dropping a suddenly eligible old flame into the cast of characters.
Sarah Conley is nothing if not driven. The only offspring of a poor Kentucky family, she managed to support her mother and herself after her father's death while she was still a childand went on to turn an afterschool job as copygirl at a small-town newspaper into a journalistic career that eventually takes her all the way to Manhattan, where she ends up as an editor of Time. Glamorous, accomplished, and quite self-satisfied, Sarah juggles her career and social life without much effort, and has pretty much gotten over the absence of her son, whose custody she lost in the course of her recent divorce. Then, however, an unexpected summons from Eugenie, an ailing childhood friend, catches her off-guard, and she returns to Kentucky to discover that Eugenie is not merely sick but dying. Eugenie is married to Jack, whom Sarah always loved and who himself fell in love with Sarah after he'd become engaged to Eugenie. And now Sarah and Jack, after an absence of years, feel once more the same passion. Jack pursues Sarah this time around, following her all the way to Paris (where she goes after her final visit with Eugenie) to plead his case. Will love triumph in the end? Can passion be put on hold? And is it really possible to go home again, after all? The most familiar and best-loved potboiler quandaries take on new life under Gilchrist's direction, lending a good deal of shading (if not depth) to a fairly unoriginal plot.
In the end, well-turned-out but unremarkable. Gilchrist keeps you in the palm of her hand when she tells a story, even if it's one that won't be remembered half an hour after it's over.