Really Good, Actually: A Novel
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NATIONAL BESTSELLER
“Every sentence of Monica Heisey’s writing is a treat. No one makes me laugh like she does.” —Dolly Alderton, New York Times bestselling author of Everything I Know About Love
Recommended by Los Angeles Times • Washington Post • GQ • Elle • Good Morning America • People • Guardian • The Times • E! News Online • The Globe and Mail • Toronto Star • The Week • New York Post • Shondaland • and many more!
A hilarious and painfully relatable debut novel about one woman’s messy search for joy and meaning in the wake of an unexpected breakup, from comedian, essayist, and award-winning screenwriter Monica Heisey
Maggie is fine. She’s doing really good, actually. Sure, she’s broke, her graduate thesis on something obscure is going nowhere, and her marriage only lasted 608 days, but at the ripe old age of twenty-nine, Maggie is determined to embrace her new life as a Surprisingly Young Divorcée™.
Now she has time to take up nine hobbies, eat hamburgers at 4 am, and “get back out there” sex-wise. With the support of her tough-loving academic advisor, Merris; her newly divorced friend, Amy; and her group chat (naturally), Maggie barrels through her first year of single life, intermittently dating, occasionally waking up on the floor and asking herself tough questions along the way.
Laugh-out-loud funny and filled with sharp observations, Really Good, Actually is a tender and bittersweet comedy that lays bare the uncertainties of modern love, friendship, and our search for that thing we like to call “happiness”. This is a remarkable debut from an unforgettable new voice in fiction.
“A prime example of how a storyteller's voice can pull you right in and keep you clinging to every sentence. . . . This is a book I will give to my closest girlfriends and say, ‘You have to read this.’” — Zibby Owens, GoodMorningAmerica.com
“Tremendously funny and thoughtful.” –GQ
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Published Reviews
Booklist Review
Maggie's marriage has abruptly and unexpectedly ended after less than two years, leaving her to figure out what comes next--which, at first, involves making questionable financial decisions until she can no longer afford the apartment she shared with her husband. Desperate to take her mind off her woes, Maggie joins a variety of dating apps and has a series of hook ups that range from sexy to creepy. Then, after a mishap at a summer-camp-themed bar, Maggie meets Simon, who is struggling with a break up of his own. Simon is intelligent, caring, and self-aware--everything she should want in a partner, but learning to trust again is more difficult than she expected. Heisey's portrayal of the joys and pitfalls of online dating will ring true, and Maggie's self-deprecating, often snarky humor keeps the deeper themes of the story from getting too heavy. It's a thoroughly modern take on 1990s chick lit, exaggeratedly over the top in the best possible way. Readers will cheer messy Maggie on as she stumbles inelegantly toward a happy, postdivorce life.
Publisher's Weekly Review
Comedian and TV writer Heisey delivers an appealing debut novel (after the essay collection I Can't Believe It's Not Better) about a 28-year-old stalled PhD candidate left adrift after her divorce. Maggie's former husband, Jon, departs with their cat, and, despite their mutual promises to have a "Good Divorce," Jon is soon incommunicado, and Maggie is surprised by how much she struggles with being alone. She stays up most nights streaming crime shows she terms "British murder television" and is disappointed that she remains "annoyingly committed" to habits such as ordering late-night burgers. Maggie progresses to online dating (the men in Maggie's area of Toronto are "bearded and left-leaning"), and after striking out there, she tries exercise classes and creative writing workshops, but wherever she joins up, she's "wall to wall with the recently dumped." Later, the grief for her marriage morphs into a kind of self-obsessed nihilism that alienates her closest friends and torpedoes a burgeoning relationship with a nice guy. Even in its darkest moments the book is very funny, and Heisey's inspired skewering of urban millennial life hits the mark. Readers will gobble up this Bridget Jones's Diary for the smartphone era. Agent: Marya Spence, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Jan.)
Library Journal Review
DEBUT Canadian comedian and TV writer Heisey takes readers along for a journey through divorce and dating in Toronto in her first novel. The heroine is 29-year-old Maggie, who is already divorced after briefly marrying her college sweetheart. After her now-ex-husband Jon walks out (taking the cat with him!), she struggles to afford rent and keep herself going day-to-day. She falls into a depression buffered by late-night burger delivery and a supporting cast of friends and advisors who try to coerce her into attending themed parties and "getting out there" again via online dating. Maggie soon meets Simon, another damaged soul, and their casual sex turns into a deeper connection that seems likely to be doomed by self-sabotage. VERDICT There are some funny moments in this light read, but Heisey goes a little over the top in trying to represent peak millennialism via Maggie's sexual exploration and niche interests. The characters are mostly relatable, all flaws properly accounted for, although they come across as exaggerated examples of personality types.--Chelsie Harris
Kirkus Book Review
The trials and tribulations of a young divorcée. "My marriage ended because I was cruel. Or because I ate in bed. Or because he liked electronic music and difficult films about men in nature. Or because I did not. Or because I was anxious, and this made me controlling." Narrator and protagonist Maggie introduces herself by presenting a litany of all the reasons why she and her husband, Jon, are getting divorced. Some of these reasons will be familiar to most longtime couples--"Or because he forgot our anniversary once"--while others seem quite specific to this couple--"Or because he kept insisting we go vegan, then sneaking pizzas into the apartment while I slept." ("Or because we finished watching The Sopranos and never started The Wire" is difficult to categorize.) In the aggregate, they suggest a relationship that has collapsed for a whole lot of reasons and no particular reason at all, and they make it clear that the story Maggie is going to tell is defined by that loss. Which is not to say that she doesn't have other issues. She kind of hates her teaching job, and her dissertation has stalled. But she might have coasted along forever without completely falling apart if not for her divorce. Novels about women who unravel somewhere around the age of 30 aren't exactly rare, but this one stands out both because it's laugh-out-loud funny and because of the artful way Heisey reveals that her heroine is most definitely not OK. Maggie's tales of dating-app life and trying out new hobbies with another young divorcée are recounted with ironic humor, but the cracks in her carefree persona expose a deep despair. For instance, Maggie torpedoes her relationship with a guy named Simon because he's "too nice" to her. During a couples counseling session Maggie schedules so she can finally sort out everything with Jon and finalize their divorce, it becomes apparent that Maggie isn't just an unreliable narrator of the story she's telling us; she's also an unreliable narrator of the story she's telling herself. Her ultimate breakdown is inevitable, and she has to work hard to win back the trust of the people who love her most--and regain trust in herself. Maggie's redemption is well earned. Smart, bighearted, and hilarious. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Booklist Reviews
Ube, pandan, and nata de coco are just a few ingredients that will become household staples after readers familiarize themselves with Bay Area-born Balingit's delectable treasure trove of sweet treats. The writer behind food blog The Dusky Kitchen shows immense pride in her family's Filipino culinary heritage while also embracing a flair for fusion. A palette of dark violet, grassy green, and warm caramel hues colors the pages, showing off nature's most vibrant ingredients in desserts like ube skillet crinkle cookies, milky avocado popsicles, and Thai leche flan. Savory-enhanced sweets such as the calamansi fish-sauce shortbread, ube cheesecake with a Gosomi (Korean crackers) crust, Sampalok tajin snickerdoodles, and Turrones de Casoy MSG brownies show off Balingit's creativity and her penchant for international blends. Among a still narrow selection of Filipino cookbooks available in the U.S., this one stands out for its inviting and singular look at the sweet side of Southeast Asian baking and for Balingit's reminiscences of a childhood and young adulthood full of family, warmth, and memories made through food. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
Booklist Reviews
Maggie's marriage has abruptly and unexpectedly ended after less than two years, leaving her to figure out what comes next—which, at first, involves making questionable financial decisions until she can no longer afford the apartment she shared with her husband. Desperate to take her mind off her woes, Maggie joins a variety of dating apps and has a series of hook ups that range from sexy to creepy. Then, after a mishap at a summer-camp-themed bar, Maggie meets Simon, who is struggling with a break up of his own. Simon is intelligent, caring, and self-aware—everything she should want in a partner, but learning to trust again is more difficult than she expected. Heisey's portrayal of the joys and pitfalls of online dating will ring true, and Maggie's self-deprecating, often snarky humor keeps the deeper themes of the story from getting too heavy. It's a thoroughly modern take on 1990s chick lit, exaggeratedly over the top in the best possible way. Readers will cheer messy Maggie on as she stumbles inelegantly toward a happy, postdivorce life. Copyright 2022 Booklist Reviews.
Library Journal Reviews
DEBUT Canadian comedian and TV writer Heisey takes readers along for a journey through divorce and dating in Toronto in her first novel. The heroine is 29-year-old Maggie, who is already divorced after briefly marrying her college sweetheart. After her now-ex-husband Jon walks out (taking the cat with him!), she struggles to afford rent and keep herself going day-to-day. She falls into a depression buffered by late-night burger delivery and a supporting cast of friends and advisors who try to coerce her into attending themed parties and "getting out there" again via online dating. Maggie soon meets Simon, another damaged soul, and their casual sex turns into a deeper connection that seems likely to be doomed by self-sabotage. VERDICT There are some funny moments in this light read, but Heisey goes a little over the top in trying to represent peak millennialism via Maggie's sexual exploration and niche interests. The characters are mostly relatable, all flaws properly accounted for, although they come across as exaggerated examples of personality types.—Chelsie Harris
Copyright 2022 Library Journal.Publishers Weekly Reviews
Comedian and TV writer Heisey delivers an appealing debut novel (after the essay collection I Can't Believe It's Not Better) about a 28-year-old stalled PhD candidate left adrift after her divorce. Maggie's former husband, Jon, departs with their cat, and, despite their mutual promises to have a "Good Divorce," Jon is soon incommunicado, and Maggie is surprised by how much she struggles with being alone. She stays up most nights streaming crime shows she terms "British murder television" and is disappointed that she remains "annoyingly committed" to habits such as ordering late-night burgers. Maggie progresses to online dating (the men in Maggie's area of Toronto are "bearded and left-leaning"), and after striking out there, she tries exercise classes and creative writing workshops, but wherever she joins up, she's "wall to wall with the recently dumped." Later, the grief for her marriage morphs into a kind of self-obsessed nihilism that alienates her closest friends and torpedoes a burgeoning relationship with a nice guy. Even in its darkest moments the book is very funny, and Heisey's inspired skewering of urban millennial life hits the mark. Readers will gobble up this Bridget Jones's Diary for the smartphone era. Agent: Marya Spence, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Jan.)
Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly.Reviews from GoodReads
Citations
Heisey, M., & Whelan, J. (2023). Really Good, Actually: A Novel (Unabridged). HarperCollins.
Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Heisey, Monica and Julia Whelan. 2023. Really Good, Actually: A Novel. HarperCollins.
Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)Heisey, Monica and Julia Whelan. Really Good, Actually: A Novel HarperCollins, 2023.
Harvard Citation (style guide)Heisey, M. and Whelan, J. (2023). Really good, actually: a novel. Unabridged HarperCollins.
MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)Heisey, Monica, and Julia Whelan. Really Good, Actually: A Novel Unabridged, HarperCollins, 2023.
Copy Details
Collection | Owned | Available | Number of Holds |
---|---|---|---|
Libby | 7 | 6 | 0 |