Talk to me
(Book)

Book Cover
Average Rating
Published
New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons, [2019].
Appears on list
Status
Aurora Hills - Adult Fiction
F KENNE
1 available

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Aurora Hills - Adult FictionF KENNEAvailable

Description

Entertainment Weekly, New & NotableNew York Post, Best Book of the Week By the author of the New York Times bestseller, Love Poems for Married People, and the Thurber Prize-winner Truth in Advertising comes a wry yet tenderhearted look at how one man's public fall from grace leads him back to his family, and back to the man he used to be.It's a story that Ted Grayson has reported time and time again in his job as a network TV anchor: the public downfall of those at the top. He just never imagined that it would happen to him. After his profanity-laced tirade is caught on camera, his reputation and career are destroyed, leaving him without a script for the first time in years.While American viewers may have loved and trusted Ted for decades, his family certainly didn't: His years of constant travel and his big-screen persona have frayed all of his important relationships. At the time of his meltdown, Ted is estranged from his wife, Claire, and his adult daughter, Franny, a writer for a popular website. Franny views her father's disgrace with curiosity and perhaps a bit of smug satisfaction, but when her boss suggests that she confront Ted in an interview, she has to decide whether to use his loss as her career gain. And for Ted, this may be a chance to take a hard look at what got him to this place, and to try to find his way back before it's too late. Talk to Me is a sharply observed, darkly funny, and ultimately warm story about a man who wakes up too late to the mess he's made of his life... and about our capacity for forgiveness and empathy.

More Details

Published
New York : G.P. Putnam's Sons, [2019].
Format
Book
Physical Desc
304 pages ; 24 cm
Language
English

Notes

Description
"From New Yorker writer and Thurber Prize-winning author of Truth in Advertising comes a wry yet tenderhearted father-daughter story that looks at family, marriage, and fame through the lens of a popular TV anchor's public fall from grace" -- Provided by publisher.

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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Old-school nightly news anchor Ted got caught on video calling an assistant, a young woman from Poland, a Russian whore. A minor miscommunication over hairspray provoked his out-of-character attack which went viral, naturally but it was the proverbial last straw. Ted's wife, Claire, just asked for a divorce; he's experiencing a disconcerting pain; and his only child, Franny, works for a cartoonishly corrupt news outlet called Scheisse and doesn't speak to him. When Franny agrees to her bad-boy boss' proposal that she profile Ted in his tailspin, Ted must ultimately accept that his decades as a reporter don't make up for his slip or even correspond to what people want from the news anymore and examine the ways he failed Claire and Franny. Kenney's (Truth in Advertising, 2013) timely satire succeeds with significant nuance. Ted did a bad thing and can't seem to stop fumbling, but it won't be hard for readers to find sympathy for the devil. Most winning, though, are Kenney's incisive considerations of parenthood, familial love, and what actually matters when all is seemingly lost.--Annie Bostrom Copyright 2018 Booklist

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

Kenney's bittersweet, darkly funny latest (after Truth in Advertising) is equal parts family drama and commentary on communication and news consumption in the age of instant gratification. Fifty-nine-year-old New York anchorman Ted Grayson has been the beloved-and ruggedly handsome-face of the national evening news for 20 years. But a vicious epithet (which he immediately regrets) hurled at a young female hairstylist on a particularly bad day (and caught on video) proves to be his undoing. Additionally, Claire, his wife of 30 years, has fallen in love with someone else, and his daughter, Franny, won't speak to him. When the video leaks, the retribution is swift and brutal: he's skewered by the press, hounded by protesters, and eventually fired. When Franny, who writes for a sensationalist online rag and is thoroughly unsatisfied with her own life, asks him to do an interview, he accepts, but it has unintended consequences that force Franny to examine her own life and her fractured relationship with her father. Kenney is supremely gifted at creating flawed, vivid characters and capturing the wonder, ennui, and heartbreak of marriage and parenthood, and the seemingly small moments that make life precious. The conclusion, while satisfying, offers no easy solutions, but it does offer a healthy dose of hope. This is a fun, winning novel. (Jan.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
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Kirkus Book Review

It's a case of death by internet when the fortunes of a beloved network news anchor take a nose dive after a shameful mistake on the set.Kenney (Truth in Advertising, 2013) opens his modern morality tale with a literal falla man jumping from a plane with no plans to open his parachute. As he plummets, he imagines the coverage: "Ted Grayson, the longtime anchor of the evening news, died today in an embarrassing skydiving accident on eastern Long Island. Sources say the disgraced former newsman may have taken his own life. He was fifty-nine." A few weeks earlier, Ted exploded at the young Polish hairstylist on the set, mistaking her smile of excitement for one of ridicule, shouting obscenities and repeatedly calling her a "Russian whore." Video of the incident, which the victim has on her phone, takes just a few days to make it from Facebook to the international news. Among those disturbed by Ted's bizarre, uncharacteristic meltdown are his estranged wife, Claire, who is already filing for divorce, and his even more alienated daughter, Frances. She, too, is a journalist of sorts, working at a site called "scheisse," where "hundreds of nearly identical-looking people in their twenties and thirties, from fine universities, posted...an endless feed of insipid online drivel, a kind of visual and verbal vomit, under the guise of journalism." When her boss asks for a piece on her dad, Frances' poison pen is ready to go. Kenney is able to portray all three of these selfish, damaged family members with depth and sympathy. While it would have been easy to make us hate them all, he achieves the opposite and saves a sweetly ironic twist for a redemptive ending.A powerful and moving rendition of a story we've been waiting to hear: what it's like to be the bad guy in this ripped-from-the-headlines situation. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

Old-school nightly news anchor Ted got caught on video calling an assistant, a young woman from Poland, a "Russian whore." A minor miscommunication over hairspray provoked his out-of-character attack—which went viral, naturally—but it was the proverbial last straw. Ted's wife, Claire, just asked for a divorce; he's experiencing a disconcerting pain; and his only child, Franny, works for a cartoonishly corrupt "news" outlet called Scheisse and doesn't speak to him. When Franny agrees to her bad-boy boss' proposal that she profile Ted in his tailspin, Ted must ultimately accept that his decades as a reporter don't make up for his slip—or even correspond to what people want from the news anymore—and examine the ways he failed Claire and Franny. ?Kenney's (Truth in Advertising, 2013) timely satire succeeds with significant nuance. Ted did a bad thing and can't seem to stop fumbling, but it won't be hard for readers to find sympathy for the devil. Most winning, though, are Kenney's incisive considerations of parenthood, familial love, and what actually matters when all is seemingly lost. Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2018 Booklist Reviews.
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LJ Express Reviews

Ted Grayson is the last of a dying breed, a respected, wealthy, somber, white news anchor. He is slow to recognize the impermanence of his position even aftera video surfaces of him verbally abusing a young female coworker. With calls for his resignation and a

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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Kenney's bittersweet, darkly funny latest (after Truth in Advertising) is equal parts family drama and commentary on communication and news consumption in the age of instant gratification. Fifty-nine-year-old New York anchorman Ted Grayson has been the beloved—and ruggedly handsome—face of the national evening news for 20 years. But a vicious epithet (which he immediately regrets) hurled at a young female hairstylist on a particularly bad day (and caught on video) proves to be his undoing. Additionally, Claire, his wife of 30 years, has fallen in love with someone else, and his daughter, Franny, won't speak to him. When the video leaks, the retribution is swift and brutal: he's skewered by the press, hounded by protesters, and eventually fired. When Franny, who writes for a sensationalist online rag and is thoroughly unsatisfied with her own life, asks him to do an interview, he accepts, but it has unintended consequences that force Franny to examine her own life and her fractured relationship with her father. Kenney is supremely gifted at creating flawed, vivid characters and capturing the wonder, ennui, and heartbreak of marriage and parenthood, and the seemingly small moments that make life precious. The conclusion, while satisfying, offers no easy solutions, but it does offer a healthy dose of hope. This is a fun, winning novel. (Jan.)

Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2018 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Kenney, J. (2019). Talk to me . G.P. Putnam's Sons.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Kenney, John, 1962-. 2019. Talk to Me. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Kenney, John, 1962-. Talk to Me New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2019.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Kenney, J. (2019). Talk to me. New York: G.P. Putnam's Sons.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Kenney, John. Talk to Me G.P. Putnam's Sons, 2019.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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