Love in mid air
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Booklist Review
Contentedly married Elyse is returning to her pleasant home in North Carolina on a flight from Phoenix when she meets Boston businessman Gerry. They start to talk, exchange numbers, and suddenly Elyse finds herself undergoing a sea change. In no time, she's engaged in a dangerous affair with Gerry, jetting off to various cities, receiving mysterious packages, and taking secretive phone calls, risking her marriage, her idyllic life as a housewife in suburbia, and the position she holds at her local church. Elyse's longtime friend Kelly is perplexed and concerned as Elyse spirals deeper into the affair with the stranger. As Elyse questions what she wants out of life, she must weigh the risk of what will happen if, or when, her husband finds out about Gerry. An intense, thoughtful novel about love and friendship, or the lack thereof, in a marriage.--Hatton, Hilary Copyright 2010 Booklist
Publisher's Weekly Review
Wright hits it out of the park in her debut, an engaging account of a woman contemplating divorce. Despite finally getting her husband, Phil, to attend counseling sessions with her, Elyse Bearden realizes her marriage is dead in the water. Though Phil's a doting father and a decent man, he's also the occasional jerk who snickers at his wife in lingerie and is generally indifferent to her. Elyse already knows she's going to leave her husband when she meets Gerry Kincaid and soon begins an affair that allows her to escape from the crushing banality of her suburban life. Serving as Elyse's foil is her beautiful best friend, Kelly, now married to an older, wealthy man. While the idea of housewives complaining about their husbands over lunch may strike some as a conventional hen-lit trope, Wright conveys friendships and the blase everyday with authenticity and telling detail, while passages depicting Elyse's inner life are rife with the same wit and insight that infuse the dialogue. Though this story is one that readers may have seen many times before, Wright delivers fresh perspective and sympathetic characters few writers can match. (Mar.) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Library Journal Review
Elyse is a bored Southern suburban housewife. She doesn't have the time or the energy to devote to her passion for art pottery, her circle of friends from church act more like enemies most of the time, and her husband just doesn't understand her anymore-if he ever did. A brief encounter with a handsome man on a plane sends Elyse into a spiral of deceit and confusion as she embarks on an affair. As Elyse searches for more from her life, she realizes that it's time to break away from her comfortable but all-wrong life and seek a more fulfilling existence. VERDICT Debut novelist Wright's characters are realistic but not particularly appealing (it's unclear why Elyse puts up with friends who aren't very nice to her most of the time). Steamy scenes describing Elyse's sex life with both her husband and her lover are unexpected, and at times, the references to church cause the story to lean toward Christian fiction. Recommended for sophisticated readers and larger women's fiction collections.-Rebecca Vnuk, Forest Park, IL (c) Copyright 2010. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Kirkus Book Review
Unhappily married woman jumps into a life-changing affair with a man she meets on a plane. With a successful dentist husband, adorable young daughter and close-knit group of female friends, Elyse, like so many heroines who have it all, could not be more miserable. She's stifled by her suburban life, and she cannot communicate with her taciturn hubby, Phil. She fortunately happens to have a creative outlet (she's a talented potter) and it is during a flight for work that she finds herself seated next to Gerry, an attractive Boston-based investment banker who, like her, has a spouse at home. The two strangers have an instant rapport, and back at home in Charlotte, N.C., she calls him. That leads to an erotically charged encounter in New York, followed by brief monthly meetings that help to convince her that marrying Phil was a mistake. But while Gerry certainly seems besotted with Elyse, he offers her no promises. Phil, unaware of her infidelity but sensing her growing unease with their life, agrees to marriage counseling, as long as they use his best friend Jeff, their minister, as mediator. Big mistake. Elyse goes along with it while mentally making plans to leave him. Meanwhile, her affluent inner circle senses something is amiss, with her best friend Kelly, herself in a less-than-ideal marriage, feeling threatened by Elyse's risky behavior. Knowing full well how her actions will impact her entire community, Elyse bides her time, until a shocking act of violence forces a decision. So will she choose her husband, her lover or neither? Sharply written and emotionally accessible, Wright's debut offers a clear-eyed taste of hope without letting anyone, especially Elyse, off the hook. A modern take on adultery that does not shy away from the costsand benefitsof a post-marriage life. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
Contentedly married Elyse is returning to her pleasant home in North Carolina on a flight from Phoenix when she meets Boston businessman Gerry. They start to talk, exchange numbers, and suddenly Elyse finds herself undergoing a sea change. In no time, she's engaged in a dangerous affair with Gerry, jetting off to various cities, receiving mysterious packages, and taking secretive phone calls, risking her marriage, her idyllic life as a housewife in suburbia, and the position she holds at her local church. Elyse's longtime friend Kelly is perplexed and concerned as Elyse spirals deeper into the affair with the stranger. As Elyse questions what she wants out of life, she must weigh the risk of what will happen if, or when, her husband finds out about Gerry. An intense, thoughtful novel about love and friendship, or the lack thereof, in a marriage. Copyright 2010 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
Elyse is a bored Southern suburban housewife. She doesn't have the time or the energy to devote to her passion for art pottery, her circle of friends from church act more like enemies most of the time, and her husband just doesn't understand her anymore—if he ever did. A brief encounter with a handsome man on a plane sends Elyse into a spiral of deceit and confusion as she embarks on an affair. As Elyse searches for more from her life, she realizes that it's time to break away from her comfortable but all-wrong life and seek a more fulfilling existence. VERDICT Debut novelist Wright's characters are realistic but not particularly appealing (it's unclear why Elyse puts up with friends who aren't very nice to her most of the time). Steamy scenes describing Elyse's sex life with both her husband and her lover are unexpected, and at times, the references to church cause the story to lean toward Christian fiction. Recommended for sophisticated readers and larger women's fiction collections.—Rebecca Vnuk, Forest Park, IL
[Page 92]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.Publishers Weekly Reviews
Wright hits it out of the park in her debut, an engaging account of a woman contemplating divorce. Despite finally getting her husband, Phil, to attend counseling sessions with her, Elyse Bearden realizes her marriage is dead in the water. Though Phil's a doting father and a decent man, he's also the occasional jerk who snickers at his wife in lingerie and is generally indifferent to her. Elyse already knows she's going to leave her husband when she meets Gerry Kincaid and soon begins an affair that allows her to escape from the crushing banality of her suburban life. Serving as Elyse's foil is her beautiful best friend, Kelly, now married to an older, wealthy man. While the idea of housewives complaining about their husbands over lunch may strike some as a conventional hen-lit trope, Wright conveys friendships and the blas everyday with authenticity and telling detail, while passages depicting Elyse's inner life are rife with the same wit and insight that infuse the dialogue. Though this story is one that readers may have seen many times before, Wright delivers fresh perspective and sympathetic characters few writers can match. (Mar.)
[Page 29]. Copyright 2010 Reed Business Information.