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Cakewalk : a novel

Brown, Rita Mae. (Author).

Set against the backdrop of America emerging from World War I, Cakewalk provides an entertaining look at a small town straddling the Mason Dixon line, where the townsfolk remain split between good and bad, or love and sex, or male and female, or politics and sobriety, and the inimitable, irrepressible, distinctly free-thinking Hunsenmier sisters, Louise and Julia--otherwise known as Wheezie and Jutz--and their wide circle of equally indelible friends. An outrageous, affecting, and surprising story of passion, rivalry, and small town antics only Rita Mae Brown could create

Book  - 2016
FIC Brown
2 copies / 0 on hold

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  • ISBN: 0553392654
  • ISBN: 9780553392654
  • Physical Description 301 pages
  • Edition First edition.
  • Publisher New York : Bantam Books, [2016]

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Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 36.00

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Library Journal Review for ISBN Number 0553392654
Cakewalk : A Novel
Cakewalk : A Novel
by Brown, Rita Mae
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Library Journal Review

Cakewalk : A Novel

Library Journal


(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Brown's most beloved characters, the irrepressible Hunsenmeir sisters Louise (Wheezie) and Julia (Juts), are back, this time as teenagers. In the fictitious town of Runnymede, on the Maryland-Pennsylvania (and Mason-Dixon) line, it's early 1920, Prohibition is sensibly ignored, and women's suffrage is considered unlikely to be ratified. Despite their sisterly squabbling, Wheezie and Juts are joined in animosity against the Rhodes girls, Lottie and Delilah Jr. (who rouges her nipples!). Much of this leisurely story concerns the older women who shape the sisters, especially their mother, Cora, and her employer and friend, the elegant and wealthy Celeste Chalfont. The Chalfont household is preparing for the wedding of Celeste's brother Curtis, who has impregnated Celeste's longtime lover, Ramelle, and Celeste is devising a plan to include the mistress of her other brother, Stirling, whose wife will not be attending the ceremony. (Such extramarital activity appears well tolerated when conducted discreetly by a certain class.) VERDICT Brown has said that the Runnymede novels, starting with Six of One, are the ones she was born to write, as they reflect her birthplace and family. This is more loving domestic comedy of small-town life when times were simpler. Recommended for fans of Brown and beyond. [See Prepub Alert, 4/25/16.]-Michele Leber, Arlington, VA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Syndetic Solutions - BookList Review for ISBN Number 0553392654
Cakewalk : A Novel
Cakewalk : A Novel
by Brown, Rita Mae
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BookList Review

Cakewalk : A Novel

Booklist


From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.

It's been over a decade, but Brown has finally added a new entry to her Runnymede series. The small town of Runnymede, Maryland, straddles the Mason-Dixon Line, and the troublesome location of the town has given rise to decades of tension among its townspeople. The story is set in 1920, just as America is emerging from the fog of WWI, and Prohibition is the contentious topic of the day. Two independent and free-thinking sisters, Louise and Julia Hunsenmeir (called Wheezie and Juts), push against the old-fashioned ways of drinking, dancing, and courting. The sisters get into plenty of trouble in Runnymede, bolstered by and clashing with a variety of friends and neighbors. Characters were inspired by Brown's own mother and sister, adding realism and depth to this uplifting story. Fans of Amy Hill Heath and Mary Kay Andrews will eat up this multigenerational slice-of-life novel.--Turza, Stephanie Copyright 2016 Booklist

Syndetic Solutions - Kirkus Review for ISBN Number 0553392654
Cakewalk : A Novel
Cakewalk : A Novel
by Brown, Rita Mae
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Kirkus Review

Cakewalk : A Novel

Kirkus Reviews


Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Southern girls gone mild figure in Browns nostalgic paean to a town bifurcated by the Mason-Dixon Line.A prefatory authors note issues a disclaimer: This is not a plot-driven book. But what readers, particularly of Browns various mystery series, may not be expecting is that the book is also not driven by suspense or conflict. Instead, it portrays more or less happy people leading uneventful and in some cases exceedingly prosperous lives in 1920. Celeste, the protagonist, is a wealthy heiress, gorgeous, bisexual, and vaguely uncomfortable with her enforced leisure since her father left the stewardship of the family industries to her brothers. With her only partially mixed blessing, her brother Curtis has just married her longtime lover, Ramelle, who is pregnant with his child. The story, such as it is, revolves around a half-year in the lives of Celeste, her friends, and retainers in the town of Runnymede, situated on the Pennsylvania/Maryland border. Celeste falls in love with Ben, a baseball player who's a World War I veteran and an aspiring stained-glass artist. She sets about making his life better without overtly appearing to be his benefactor and wounding his male pride. Her housekeeper and cook, Cora, has two daughters, Louise and Julia, who provide the closest thing to entertainment this novel offers with their crushes and teenage rivalries, including a long-standing spat with a classmate, Dimps Jr., whose main offense seems to be large breasts. Celeste comes to the aid of her older sister, Carlotta, who runs a Catholic school, when a fire breaks out, threatening to expose a major source of the schools and Carlottas income: a cellarful of bootleg liquor. (Prohibition has just descended on Runnymedes recalcitrant citizens.) Apparently both a prequel to and recap of her other Runnymede novels (e.g. Loose Lips, 1999, Six of One, 1978, etc.), this outing serves up unremitting dollops of niceness.Happy families, alike or not, do not electrifying fiction make. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.