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Lily Brett

Auteur de Too Many Men

24+ oeuvres 1,098 utilisateurs 37 critiques 3 Favoris

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Comprend les noms: Lily Brett

Séries

Œuvres de Lily Brett

Too Many Men (2000) 261 exemplaires
You Gotta Have Balls (2005) 217 exemplaires
New York (2000) 118 exemplaires
Just Like That (1994) 114 exemplaires
In Full View (1997) 84 exemplaires
Lola Bensky (2012) 80 exemplaires
Between Mexico and Poland (2002) 62 exemplaires
What God Wants (1991) 30 exemplaires
Things Could Be Worse (1990) 29 exemplaires
Only in New York (2014) 28 exemplaires
Old Seems to Be Other People (2020) 20 exemplaires
Auschwitz Poems (1986) 16 exemplaires
Collected Stories (1999) 16 exemplaires
Poland and other poems (1987) 3 exemplaires
Unintended Consequences (1992) 3 exemplaires
Liebesgedichte (2008) 2 exemplaires
In her strapless dresses (1994) 2 exemplaires
Blistered Days (2007) 2 exemplaires
After the War: Poems (1990) 2 exemplaires
Mud in my tears (1997) 2 exemplaires
New York, 1 Cassette (2001) 1 exemplaire
2012 1 exemplaire

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A comic novel in the shadow of Auschwitz? Somehow Lily Brett pulled it off in “Too Many Men.” She does it again in the even funnier sequel “Uncomfortably Close” (2006).

In the earlier novel New Yorker Ruth Rothwax, the daughter of two Auschwitz survivors, persuades her father, Edek, to visit Poland with her and return to the place where he lost so many friends and relatives. While in Poland the old man becomes enamored with Zofia, a busty and aggressive Polish woman, whom Ruth instantly dislikes.

Now in the second book Edek has moved to New York City from Australia and "helps" his daughter with her successful letter-writing and greeting card business. Mostly he just gets in the way, and Ruth tries to persuade him to get involved in some activity outside her office. Then suddenly he does, and Ruth becomes more frustrated by his absence than she was when he was purchasing office supplies she didn't need.

The explanation, she learns, is that Zofia and her quiet friend Walentyna have migrated from Poland and moved in with her father. Ruth had thought she was rid of Zofia when they left Poland, but now she is back in their lives, apparently to stay.

Zofia, in her late 60s and about 20 years younger than Edek, turns out to be a terrific cook and a bundle of energy. Zofia, Edek and Walentyna come up with a plan to open a meatball restaurant in an unpromising part of New York City. Edek promises to support the project financially, but since Ruth supports Edek, that means her money will be needed to open the restaurant. She's convinced it can never succeed, but unable to say no to her father, she loans them the money anyway.

While all this is going on, Ruth is trying to start a group for middle-aged and older women to meet and talk about topics, like sex, they might not otherwise talk about, although from the conversations reported in the novel, women of all ages talk about these topics all the time with or without a support group. But if Ruth is so committed to supporting women, why does she have such negative feelings toward Zofia, whom her father obviously adores? Everyone else, including her husband, her children, her friends and her work associates, love Zofia and think the restaurant is a great idea. So why does Ruth feel she must protect her father from her?

Reading the first of these autobiographical novels helps us understand the second. Ruth still blames the Polish people, all of them, for what happened to her family members at Auschwitz. She must somehow soften the deep-seated biases that conflict with her love for her more forgiving father and her wish for his happiness.
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
hardlyhardy | 14 autres critiques | Feb 5, 2023 |
Lily Brett writes a great story! You gotta have balls is a hoot of a book. Edek is larger than life although not young, he’s 87, recently widowed and just arrived in New York from Australia. He survived Auschwitz, how hard can it be to move to the other side of the world. He’s come to be close to his daughter Ruthie ‘I can help you in the business. I can still carry parcels and I can order stuff what you need. I can make things easier for you.’ It’s only been five months and already he’s driving Ruth nuts! Something else needs to be found to fill his days and leave her to work, on her own. Maybe Ruth should be careful what she wishes. Enter Zofia! Zofia is a 60 something firecracker who knows what she wants. Now Edek is always too busy ‘…..doing stuff’ when Ruth rings. I hadn’t pre-read any reviews so when the reason for what I thought an odd title was revealed, I had a good laugh. I fell in love with Edek, Zofia and Ruthie in this endearing tale of family life, big crazy happy life!… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
Fliss88 | 14 autres critiques | Feb 5, 2023 |
Lily Brett I love your writing style. This book is NOT written by an old person! Like you "It is not that I feel old. I should feel old, but I don't." from page 1 of your book. I hit 67 this year. Please keep writing. I promise I'll keep reading what you write! This is a book that made me smile, made me laugh and made me forget about how old I am!!
 
Signalé
Fliss88 | 2 autres critiques | Feb 15, 2022 |
What a delightful book. I'm new to Lily Brett, and picked this up after hearing her interview on ABC RN. In this book, Lily Brett chronicles the day to day with gentle humour and a grace that belies her claim to multiple anxieties. Themed around age, but tbh, if it wasn't in the title, I would have noticed because there is richness across her home, family, friends, community, food, cultural trends, politics but mostly around New York.
 
Signalé
tandah | 2 autres critiques | Jan 11, 2022 |

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Œuvres
24
Aussi par
1
Membres
1,098
Popularité
#23,392
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
37
ISBN
117
Langues
2
Favoris
3

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