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The Perfect Elizabeth (thing)
See all of The Perfect Elizabeth
, no other writeups in this node.
(
thing
)
by
junkpile
Tue Sep 05 2000 at 17:20:11
copyright 2000
Libby Schmais
,
St. Martin's Press
. 240 pages. fiction.
It's not a
terrible
book. But it's not great either. An Amazon reader review says "As a frequent patron of Starbucks I thoroughly enjoy chatting endlessly about trivial matters as well as reading books that don't claim to be War and Peace. The Perfect Elizabeth is a great
sit down
with a cup of coffee
kind of
read."   True enough. But it's not
interesting
.
The main character is Eliza,
her sister
is Bette. Two derivatives of "Elizabeth," as if their parents had expected them together to form
one perfect daughter
. Interesting premise. But the book never delves, at ALL, into the parental expectations, or how the sisters might or might not struggle to live up to their disjointed names - instead, the novel slumps into all this boring job stuf] and boring boy stuff and boring day-to-day garbage that anyone would hardly bother to put in their own journal, much less a book for publication. Plus the main character, 32 years old, calls her mom "Mommy" through the book. It bugged me.
Good: Occasional funny-slash-odd phrasing I didn't see coming. Unfortunately this doesn't always work in the book's favor - the text seems stilted at times. I don't like thinking, She wouldn't say it like THAT.
Also good: The structure of this book is what made me keep reading. Each chapter is broken into pieces, each piece into bits. Sometimes the sub-stories are directly related, sometimes Schmais goes off on tangents, which is interesting, but doesn't get as wild as it could. I'd have been happier if she'd gone a lot less linear and more stream-of-consciousness; it might have made a bland book sparkle.
Very very bad:
On page 238 I started to wonder
if Schmais was going to end the book how I THOUGHT she was going to end the book. On page 239 I was filled with looming dread.
On page 240 I was proven right
, which made me sad and angry and ready to read something less predictable, like the phonebook.
There is absolutely zero reason for the cover illustration to be a disposable
cup on a doily
. Can we say Cover went to printer before final edit of text.
Bottom line: Trivia is great. But someone has to care.
Elizabeth
David Sedaris
eternity would be boring
Elizabeth Barrett Browning: Sonnet XXVI
Chessmen of Mars Chapter 5
St. Martin's Press
Cup of Miriam
sit down
perfect