Shred sisters A novel

Betsy Lerner

Book - 2024

"From Betsy Lerner, celebrated author of The Bridge Ladies, comes a wry and riveting debut novel about family, mental illness, and a hard-won path between two sisters. It is said that when one person in a family is unstable, the whole family is destabilized. Meet the Shreds. Olivia is the sister in the spotlight, but when her stunning confidence morphs into something erratic and unpredictable, she becomes a hurricane leaving the Shred family wrecked in her wake. Put simply, she has no brakes. Younger sister Amy, cautious and studious to the core, dreams of winning a Nobel Prize in science. Amy believes in facts, proof, and the empirical world. Except none of that can explain what's happening to Ollie, whose physical beauty and cha...risma mask the bipolar disorder that will shatter Amy's carefully constructed world. As Amy comes of age and seeks to find her place-first in academics, then New York publishing, and through a series of men-every step brings collisions with Ollie. For all that upends and unsettles these sisters, an inextricable bond always draws them back. Spanning two decades, Shred Sisters is an intimate and bittersweet story exploring the fierce complexities of sisterhood, mental health, loss and love. If anything is true it's what Amy learns on her road to self-acceptance: No one will love you or hurt you more than a sister"--

Saved in:
20 people waiting
5 copies ordered
4 being processed

1st Floor New Shelf Show me where

FICTION/Lerner Betsy
0 / 4 copies available
Location Call Number   Status
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Lerner Betsy (NEW SHELF) On Holdshelf
+1 Hold
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Lerner Betsy (NEW SHELF) On Holdshelf
+1 Hold
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Lerner Betsy (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 30, 2024
1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Lerner Betsy (NEW SHELF) Due Nov 30, 2024
Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Grove Press, an imprint of Grove Atlantic 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Betsy Lerner (author)
Edition
First edition. First Grove Atlantic hardcover edition
Physical Description
264 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9780802163707
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Beautiful, charming, manipulative, and impetuous, Olivia Shred turns epically reckless and downright feral. She leaves Amy, her clutched-up, brainy, and bullied younger sister, bereft and propels the break-up of their parents' marriage. In her magnetizing, zippy, painfully and sweetly funny first novel of a family under siege, Lerner has aspiring scientist Amy narrate as she determines that being a workaholic is the only way forward. She clings to reason, structure, and routine, while Ollie swoops into and out of her life, by turns f ilthy and starving or radiant and mischievous but always seductive and scheming, always in the grip of a bedeviling mental illness. As Amy's grand plan collapses, "man-child" Josh relieves her of many of her inhibitions as she stumbles away from the laboratory and into publishing, forever bracing for her sister's next crisis. The perfectly named Shred sisters' ups and downs are wrenching and felicitous, while Amy is a triumph of clashing emotions, self-sabotage and self-preservation, anguish, loyalty, and love. Aerodynamic prose, psychological acuity, tangy wit, knotty family dynamics, and heady twists and turns make for an exhilarating read.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Literary agent Lerner (Food and Loathing, a memoir) traces the impact of mental illness on a pair of sisters in her moving debut novel. Amy, the narrator, describes herself as studious and highly motivated compared to her wild and beautiful older sister, Olivia, who frequently engages in risky or outright illegal behavior, from shoplifting to disappearing for days a time. As the sisters grow up, Ollie's misbehavior poses greater dangers, not only for herself, but also for their parents and for Amy's friendships, romantic relationships, and even her career. Ollie's condition isn't named until late in the novel; part of Lerner's skilled approach to narrative lies in subtly depicting the destigmatizing of mental illness and the evolution of treatment during the period from the sisters' childhood in the 1970s through the 1990s. Lerner's portrayal of Amy's five-year course of therapy is particularly rewarding, as Amy explores the limits and strengths of her bond with Olivia. The result is a quietly lovely and ultimately hopeful chronicle of a complicated family. Agent: David Black, David Black Agency. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

The younger of two siblings grows up in the shadow of her beautiful, reckless, mentally ill sister. "Here are the ways I could start this story," Amy Shred says, offering three choices in a brief prologue to memoirist and literary agent Lerner's debut novel. "Olivia was breathtaking." "For a long time, I was convinced that she was responsible for everything that went wrong." "No one will love you more or hurt you more than a sister." The engaging, thoughtful voice established here goes on to unfold the story of Amy's childhood, coming of age, and early adulthood, all profoundly shaped by the wild trajectory of her older sister: a rebel, a runaway, a mental patient, a dropout, a thief, a missing person. Amy herself--called Bunny or Bun in the family--is the classic supersmart miserable outsider, bullied at school, friendless, always bewildered at the utter unfairness of life. What could be a nice normal Connecticut Jewish family is anything but as Amy's parents are pushed far beyond their ability to cope, and ultimately their ability to stay married. Amy finishes a science major at college in three years and throws herself into graduate work at a lab at Columbia University, zigzags into publishing, finally loses her virginity, meets the man she will marry, and goes into therapy. The story unfolds with the verisimilitude of a memoir: Amy's nuanced relationships with her mother, her father, and her partners are all utterly convincing and relatable. Her mother, Lorraine, is a particularly fine creation, both a very specific East Coast Jewish type and an archetypal maternal presence. "In the months and years after she died, I often saw the world through her eyes, as if I had inherited her mantle of judgment, her scoreboard in the sky." Many of us know that feeling exactly. A seamlessly constructed and absorbing fictional world, full of insight about how families work. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.