USA Today – Jennifer Mattson https://jennifersmattson.com Mon, 03 Mar 2014 21:48:29 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=5.4.16 https://jennifersmattson.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/02/cropped-cropped-10043291766_e634f1e358_b_bio-32x32.jpg USA Today – Jennifer Mattson https://jennifersmattson.com 32 32 Books: Sibling rivalry steps wittily into ‘Shoes’ https://jennifersmattson.com/2014/03/03/books-sibling-rivalry-steps-wittily-into-shoes/ https://jennifersmattson.com/2014/03/03/books-sibling-rivalry-steps-wittily-into-shoes/#respond Mon, 03 Mar 2014 21:37:07 +0000 http://jennifersmattson.com/?p=321 Continue reading ]]> By Jennifer Mattson, Special to USA TODAY

In Her Shoes, Jennifer Weiner’s highly anticipated follow-up to Good in Bed, speaks to women who have endured the hardships of sibling rivalry or dreamed of trying on someone else’s life. It is also an honest look at one woman’s struggle with weight.

But unlike other weight-obsessed characters in contemporary popular fiction, 30-year-old Rose Feller actually is plus-size. She is not like Bridget Jones, who worries about being fat even though her weight is normal. Rose, a smart, wisecracking, successful lawyer in Philadelphia, is most definitely fat.

The book begins when Rose’s dream date is interrupted by a call and she is forced to rescue her drunk, irresponsible sister from a 10-year high school reunion.

Maggie Feller, 28, is quite the opposite of Rose. Maggie is gorgeous and glides effortlessly through life, from one job and boyfriend to the next, until she’s evicted from her apartment. She moves in with Rose, swiping everything from her older sister’s credit cards to her shoes. But Maggie crosses the line by stealing the one thing Rose isn’t willing to share.

In Her Shoes chronicles the sisters’ adventures as they go their separate ways and end up discovering, along the way, a missing part of themselves.

Weiner is at her best with her witty descriptions of the “stepmonster” Sydelle and Rose’s eccentric law firm, where the managing partner has gone off the deep end. Obsessed with extreme sports, Dom Dommel treats his firm like a sports team — replacing the water cooler with Gatorade, meetings with pep rallies and the yearly bonus with a skateboard.

The book has a happy ending, and Weiner avoids selling out Rose by making her thin (and more likable). She finds love and happiness without shedding a pound.

Despite Weiner’s faithful treatment of her characters, In Her Shoes has its disappointments. Rose and Maggie’s search for their long-lost grandmother wraps up too neatly and is annoyingly predictable.

The book is too long and loses energy by the end. In Her Shoes will make readers laugh and perhaps cry, but it’s rough around the edges.

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Black female writers shake things up https://jennifersmattson.com/2003/12/16/black-female-writers-shake-things-up/ https://jennifersmattson.com/2003/12/16/black-female-writers-shake-things-up/#respond Tue, 16 Dec 2003 17:56:59 +0000 http://jennifersmattson.com/?p=174 Continue reading ]]> By Jennifer Mattson, Special to USA TODAY

“At last, a number of older Black women writers can stop holding their breath and exhale,” writes Maya Angelou in her praise for Shaking the Tree: A Collection of New Fiction and Memoir by Black Women, edited by Meri Nana-Ama Danquah. The new anthology showcases the next generation of African-American female writers who are defining a new era of contemporary American literature.

Shaking is made up of 23 excerpted essays and chapters from books published in the 1990s. Weaned on the works of Alice Walker, Toni Morrison, Maya Angelou and Jamaica Kincaid, the authors are their mothers’ daughters, and yet nothing like them. They are the children of black power, Fat Albert, and the Reagan and Bush presidencies. Unlike their parents, this new wave of writers doesn’t see the world in black and white. They are biracial and multicultural — children of mixed heritage who identify as black and white.

In “Larchmont,” from her book Black, White and Jewish: Autobiography of a Shifting Self, Alice Walker’s daughter, Rebecca Walker, writes about being black and Jewish. After moving from the Bronx to the predominantly white New York suburbs, Walker is painfully aware that others perceive her as black, although she never identifies herself that way.

In “July 1978,” from her memoir The Book of Sarahs, Catherine McKinley writes about growing up black in a white family. McKinley was one of a few thousand black and biracial children adopted into white homes in the 1960s and ’70s.

McKinley and Walker, like several authors in the anthology, write about outgrowing the rigid classifications of race, while, unfortunately, the people around them have not. The collection is filled with stories of black women trying to find their way in a world unknown to their parents. They write about a life their mothers could only dream of. Some attended posh boarding schools, others earned their MFAs and write for a living, a career previously unheard of for black women.

While at times Shaking the Tree seems somewhat hastily compiled, what it lacks in good editing it makes up for in its intimate, personal stories.
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