Click on a thumbnail to go to Google Books.
Loading... This Beautiful Life: A Novel (P.S.) (edition 2012)by Helen Schulman
Work InformationThis Beautiful Life by Helen Schulman
Our digital age (30) Loading...
Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Read this in one gulp. Very good indeed. Closely observed. Chilling. ( ) I didn't get what I was expecting from this book but in the end I think Ms. Schulman is a gifted writer/storyteller who crafted a very good story but it was more focuses on the main character and what at times felt like her whining than the story of her son. I just couldn't relate or even like the main character's but I did enjoy some aspects of the story and overall I enjoyed the book. Much-hyped yarn about Internet sex scandal at tony UES prep school and its devastating consequences for a formerly picture-book family turns out to be riddled with stereotypes and lazy writing. Schulman was canny enough to pick an eminently book club-ready premise for her novel, but is unable to transcend her setting, which has been more crisply skewered elsewhere, or her characters, who are so bland and self-absorbed that they practically evaporate. Hard for me to believe I'm reading the same book as all those reviewers; maybe there was some kind of weird book-jacket mixup at the warehouse? no reviews | add a review
Fiction.
Literature.
HTML: When the Bergamots move from comfortable suburban Ithaca to New York City, they're not sure how well they will adapt—or what to make of the strange new world of the well-to-do Upper West Side. But soon Richard is consumed by his executive role at a large New York university, and Liz, who has traded in her academic career to oversee the lives of their children, is hectically ferrying six-year-old Coco around town. Fifteen-year-old Jake is graciously taken in by a group of friends at Wildwood, an elite private day school. But the upper-class cocoon in which they have enveloped themselves is ripped apart when Jake wakes up one morning after an unchaperoned party and finds an e-mail waiting in his inbox from an eighth-grade admirer. Attached is a sexually explicit video she has made for him. Shocked, stunned, maybe a little proud, scared—a jumble of adolescent emotion—he forwards the video to a friend, who then forwards it to a friend, and the video goes viral. Within hours, it's not only all over the school but all over the city—and all over the Internet. In the aftermath, Jake is suspended from school, Liz's social standing among the Wildwood moms is challenged, and Richard's job is at risk. Good people faced with bad choices, they decide to fight back. But how? Do they use the very weapons wielded against them—the media and the law? And at what moral and professional cost? How they choose to react, individually and at one another's behest, places everything they hold dear in jeopardy; they are completely caught off guard by the ramifications of their actions, not only to their marriage, their daughter, their place in the community, but to Jake—the very one they have set out to protect. This Beautiful Life is a powerful exploration of the blurring boundaries of privacy and the fragility of self, a tour de force of modern life that will have listeners debating their assumptions about family, morality, and the sacrifices and choices we make in the name of love. .No library descriptions found. |
Current DiscussionsNonePopular covers
Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
Is this you?Become a LibraryThing Author. |