At Last is a new slower-paced saga style novel from Marisa Silver that follows the connecting of two families through the marriage of their children. It’s an interesting dynamic, blending two families together. They each come with their own baggage and motivations.
Helene’s son Tom and Evelyn’s daughter Ruth are starting a family together. The novel explores both of their histories, and follows the fate of them through to the sunset of their lives. They don’t have a lot in common, and honestly get quite competitive with one another, especially once grandchildren become involved. This story explores the theme that love isn’t quantifiable. Loving someone doesn’t mean there is any less available for someone else, even when our human instincts fight against that idea.
It’s an interesting story, but I didn’t find it very engaging. It’s not a very happy story, and there wasn’t much active drama either. I felt like maybe a stronger through line could have been helpful. As it is, it felt quite disjointed. I’m not sure I was the ideal reader for this.
Note:: I received an early copy of this book from the publisher through netgalley in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Details
Title:: At Last Author:: Marisa Silver Genre:: Women’s Fiction Publisher:: Simon & Schuster Length::288 pages Audio Length::8h 4m Audiobook Narrator:: Mia Barron Published:: September 2nd, 2025 The Litertarian Rating:: 3-Stars
I used to avoid books like A Summer Affair. Books marketed distinctly as ‘beach reads’. I thought they would be quick, light, shallow romance tales of people falling in love over the summer. (Ironically, I consume those exact stories like candy now anyway, but I digress. Yes, I used to be a self-proclaimed Book Snob.) Little did I know, Elin Hilderbrand, the queen of the ‘beach read’, is a weaver of complex, realistic stories that are almost the exact opposite of light and shallow. They are substantive. Really the only ‘beachy’ thing about it is the cover. Who knew?
A Summer Affair follows Claire, a mostly-happy suburban type living on Nantucket. Rumored to have had a past relationship with Max West, one of the biggest music stars in the world, she is asked to co-chair a benefit gala for Nantucket’s Children, assuming she would be able to secure the ungettable-get that would set their event apart from other charities (yeah, yeah, these rich people are out of control). Claire is not the sort who would normally be asked to do something like this. She is a glass-blowing artist who is on a break from work after the premature birth of her last baby. She is the quintessential soccer mom with Catholic Guilt issues. She’s not filthy stinking rich. But, sitting there across from Lockhart Dixon, the man who’s wife Claire failed to keep from drunk driving years before (resulting in an accident that nearly killed her and instead changed her entire personality), she finds she cannot say no. More than that, she finds his compliments and general demeanor attractive in a way she never expected.
It’s a complex story woven through several points-of-view surrounding the gala everyone hopes to pull off without a hitch. But life is still happening. Old loves, new ones, addictions, chance-encounters, and white-collar crimes are all facets of this tale of character, happenstance, and the struggle for purpose and meaning.
I’ve found Elin Hilderbrand to be quite a reliable author. Her stories are always quite engrossing and more than anything, interesting. Her characters are tangled in complicated webs and don’t always make the best decisions. Her books are fascinating. I’m hooked. And I have several more on my reading list this year.
If you’re a Hilderbrand fan, share your favorite of hers in the comments. I’d love to know what I should read next!
Details
Title:: A Summer Affair (Nantucket #1) Author:: Elin Hilderbrand Genre:: Contemporary Fiction Publisher:: Little Brown/Hachette Length::416 pages Audio Length::14h 41m Audiobook Narrator:: Isabel Keating Audiobook Publisher:: Hachette Audio Published:: July 1st, 2008 The Litertarian Rating:: 4-Stars
Timing is everything, and who knows that better than a wine maker? I’m learning that lesson again from Eight Hundred Grapes. I read it once before in 2022 and rated it 3 stars. Rereading again in 2025 it has earned 5.
I suppose for me it was an acquired taste.
Georgia flees town in her wedding dress, taking refuge back home in Sonoma county, at the bar her brothers own together. She’s been away awhile, and returns to find things not at all how she left them, but in just as complicated a mess as she finds her own self in. The foundations of her family she always believed to be unshakable have been shooketh, and she’s scrambling to make sense of the new reality taking shape around her.
I’m struggling to understand why a version of myself from three years ago didn’t find anything to connect with in this novel. I must not have, to have rated it three stars. The me of today sees a young woman coming to terms with a rite of passage that was thrust upon her all at once instead of coming to it on her own: the dissolution of her folks turning from ‘parents’ into ‘people’. This coming on the heels of a revelation that her fiancé has been hiding the biggest imaginable secret, and that her brothers are tangled up in something she doesn’t understand. All of these things are reinforcing the idea that people, no matter how good their intentions are, or how otherwise ‘good’ they may be, can and will make decisions that can hurt you. Decisions you may not understand. Decisions that will cause ripple effects far beyond what might have been expected.
This book is about coming to terms with the humanity and imperfections of your family, about the impermanence of some things and the imprinting of others upon the very fabric of your being. About holding onto and letting go of childhood. It’s about potential. It’s about building cultivating the soil and knowing when to give up, and more importantly, when not to. It’s about taking control of your own destiny, and accepting the fallibility of others, as we are fallible ourselves. But really it’s a story of a family in crisis, and who can’t relate to that at some level?
Laura Dave, I’m sorry I did not see or understand the brilliance of this novel the first time around. I’m just glad I picked it up again and saw its true worth this time. Thank you, for such an incredible story.
Details
Title:: Eight Hundred Grapes Author:: Laura Dave Genre:: Contemporary/General Fiction Publisher:: Simon & Schuster Length::274 pages Audio Length::8h 6m Audiobook Narrator:: Joy Osmanski Published:: February 1st, 2022 The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars
There is something magical about finding the right book at the right time. When something about the state of your life at the moment resonates deeply with the book you’ve chosen to read at that time. It might not be something that blows everyone away with its grandeur, but it touches on some deep-rooted truth in you.
Emma is so focused on her career as an underappreciated literary agent that she’s been skimming past many other aspects of her life: her kids, her friends, her dog, and her husband. It’s their anniversary, and for the first time ever, she’s forgotten to write him their traditional anniversary letter. It turns out to be a pretty typical day for her, rushing past everything and everyone, until a catastrophic event happens just before bed and changes everything. The next day she wakes up and lives it again. And again. Maybe she has the opportunity to change things – to avert the catastrophe. If only she can find the way.
As a thirty-something working mama who’s been married 10+ years, this book hit me hard. It’s about seeing what’s right in front of you. Not taking anything for granted. Slowing down. We get so caught up in the things we have to do (make money), that we neglect the things that are actually the most important to us. Why is it so easy to get our priorities mixed up?
I think the part that connected so deeply is how realistic it seemed. Yeah, obviously she hasn’t connected to her friends in awhile. Yeah, her kid’s problems are probably going to be old news by the weekend at the latest. Yeah, she has important shit to do at work she needs to concentrate on and that take priority. Yeah, her husband is always there to help pick up any slack.
Ooof.
I cried like a little baby. A sobbing, inconsolable baby.
I will read this book many times in the future, but I’m really not sure if it will have the same effect on me when I read it again. I hope it does. And I hope you read it too. This is one of my favorites of the year!
Details
Title:: Maybe Next Time Author:: Cesca Major Genre:: Magical Realism Publisher:: William Morrow Length::384 pages Audio Length::8h 38m Audiobook Narrator:: Clare Corbett Audiobook Publisher:: Harper Audio Published:: March 7th, 2023 The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars
As a 30-something middle-ish-class woman, I have been approached by a lot of MLMers through the years, and even joined a few (for the discount, of course). Essential oils, beauty products, ‘adult’ things, jewelry, children’s books, and even packaged food and mixes. I know how they operate. I know the jargon they use and the sickly positive vibes they project like the batman spotlight for encouragement and motivation…and damn, if this book did not capture that vibe perfectly.
Vicky is a high ranking Puremetics consultant looking for the next great team member to recruit and push her up over the next line of promotion in her business. She is currently the fastest growing upper tier star of the company and wants to keep up the momentum. When she meets Anna, a new member of their community, she pounces on the opportunity to get her (and her contacts back in Oregon) in her downline. But a mistaken address leads Anna to a different sort of meeting that will change the course of both their lives. Instead of a spy-day style girl’s night to sample Puremetics products, Anna has stumbled upon one full of anti-MLMers looking to take down the beast that is Puremetics and its enigmatic leader.
This is a scathing commentary on MLM pyramid scheme style direct-sales marketing companies and the way they prey on the vulnerable (women, mostly, but really any and everyone new consultants can convince to join). While the book does not mention any real MLM companies (except a brief reference to the OG Avon) and is perhaps a caricature of some of their most despicable practices & of those who lead companies like these, it certainly takes a stance against them.
Religion is another rampant theme. Vicky’s husband’s career is in the Mormon church, and her family has always been devout in that religion (yep-it’s set in Utah, how’d you guess?). I’m not sure if it was a critique of this religion in particular, or stringent religious beliefs which encourage deep life-long guilt for making very human mistakes, and sometimes simply being who you are in general. Either way, the issues are characterized well within the plot of the novel, driving character decisions and living rent free in the character’s heads. There may also be a nod to scientology mixed in there somewhere that I didn’t miss (but seriously, where are you Shelly Miscavige?!).
The perspective shifts between a few characters to show many aspects of the issues. There is the diehard ‘business owner’ Puremetics consultant, an anti-MLM hero with a personal vendetta, and a normal-ass chica with her own problems who gets swept up in all of it. The ‘mission’ to take them down gives the novel clear focus and makes it so compelling.
I don’t watch a lot of reality tv myself, but I imagine fans of it would eat this novel up. It’s got suburban drama with a side of Stepford going on. I loved it, I think you will too.
Note: I received this title as an advanced listening copy from netgalley and the author for free in exchange for my honest review.
Details
Title:: Splendid Little Schemes Author:: Robin Strong Genre:: Contemporary Fiction/Satire Publisher:: Strong Stories LLC Length::309 pages Audio Length::9h 17m Audiobook Narrator:: Robin Strong Audiobook Publisher:: Strong Stories LLC Published:: October 10th, 2024 The Litertarian Rating:: 5-Stars