Returns and exchanges A novel

Kayla Rae Whitaker

Book - 2026

"A sweeping novel of one Southern family's rise and fall throughout the 1980s-a tragicomic tour de force about love and marriage, parents and children, and the promise and limitations of the American Dream, from the acclaimed author of The Animators It's December 24, 1979, just before closing at Baker-Taylor's, and Fran (née Baker) is surveying her domain. Her husband, Fred, is charming customers in the front of the store, while last-minute shoppers in the toy aisle are fighting over the lone remaining Atari. The older Taylor kids are on register, while the younger ones' chaos is contained to the stockroom. All is right in the world as the new decade approaches. With four healthy children and financial stability th...eir own parents could have only dreamed of, Fred and Fran are the picture of the American Dream-rags to riches-with a family-owned chain of successful discount department stores built on years of hard work and long hours. Underneath the surface, however, the business is changing at a breakneck pace, and each member of the family is struggling to keep up. Money is transforming Fred, and the extremes he will go to in order to fit in with Lexington, Kentucky's slicked-back high society crowd are embarrassing, if not downright dangerous. Oldest son Josiah wants nothing to do with the family business, Sam is seeing things that might not really be there, and Benny and Birdie are growing up with a fraction of the parenting that their older brothers did. Meanwhile, Fran, her family's stable core, is falling for Wendy, a cashier at Baker-Taylor's, risking everything along the way. While trying to maintain the facade of a perfect success story, Fred and Fran learn that in matters of love and money, once it's gone, it's gone-no returns, no exchanges"-- Provided by publisher.

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Fiction
Romans
Published
New York, NY : Random House [2026]
Language
English
Main Author
Kayla Rae Whitaker (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
ISBN
9780593733349
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

This gimlet-eyed saga from Whitaker (The Animators) traces the rise of a family-owned chain of discount stores in Kentucky. Fran and Fred Taylor grew up in a rural part of the state in "standard issue deprivation." By 1979, they're in their early 40s and are raising four kids in Lexington while running Baker-Taylor's, a discount department store that's positioned to expand. Though they're viewed as gauche by their old-money neighbors, they're proud of their "do-it-on-my-own money." As their stylish cousin Jack once said, "What Fred lacked in worldview, he made up for with hunger." But as the family settles into upper-middle-class life, Fred and Fran's bond begins to fray. To Fran's surprise, she can't stop daydreaming about Wendy, one of the store's new general managers. Fred, plagued by anxiety about how others view him, achieves his dream of being invited to join an exclusive fraternal organization but hides it from Fran. Their four children, ranging from middle school-- to college-age, become increasingly disillusioned by their family's growing fortune. Whitaker expertly juggles the expansive cast of characters and elicits sympathy for all of them even when they exhibit the worst parts of themselves. It's an openhearted epic of the American dream and the bargains struck to achieve it. Agent: Bonnie Nadell, Hill Nadell Literary. (May)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A successful Southeast retail chain contends with two different destabilizing forces. The novel begins during the 1979 holiday season at the Lexington, Kentucky, branch of discount retailer Baker-Taylor's, where Fran Taylor--as a female chief executive, she's a rarity--ruminates over her good fortune: "Poor, to middling, to downright upper-middle class, judging by their '78 tax returns, and all within twenty years." Sharing the glory as well as the CEO title is Fran's husband, Fred, who, after all this time--they've known each other since they were teenagers--still isn't "at the point where he could see the red of her hair from across the room without feeling a shiver within." Fran isn't looking to further complicate her life--in addition to running the business, she and Fred are raising four kids--when she finds herself attracted to Wendy Patterson, one of the stores' assistant managers. It isn't lost on Fran that if she acts on her desire, she could lose everything. The novel spans a decade in the lives of the six Taylors, each of whom is hard-bitten and bruised in some combination, and each of whom takes a turn with the book's point of view. Whitaker has written a sprawling, extravagantly intelligent novel about people quietly breaking free from constraints--marital, gender, class. Here, as in her widely admired debut novel,The Animators (2017), she's attuned to working people's lives and to the idea that professional ambition may be the purest reflection of character. The novel plays out against a distinctly American landscape in which Wendy's encroachment on the Taylor marriage syncs up with the encroachment of a Walmart-like chain that people on the Baker-Taylor's team refer to as "the Beast." Not for nothing is this book's epigraph a Sam Walton quote. Superb. Like a blue-collar Franzen novel. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.