The Senator's Children
The Senator's Children
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Publisher's Hardcover (Large Print) ©2018--
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Thorndike Press
Annotation: Sisters Betsy and Avery have never met, but they have both spent their lives under the scrutiny of prying cameras and ta... more
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #368064
Format: Publisher's Hardcover (Large Print)
Special Formats: Large Print Large Print
Publisher: Thorndike Press
Copyright Date: 2018
Edition Date: 2018 Release Date: 02/28/18
ISBN: 1-432-84783-X
ISBN 13: 978-1-432-84783-8
Dewey: Fic
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)

A handsome, promising political candidate and his family are slammed by destiny and bad decisions.In vignettes ranging from 1984 to 2010, Montemarano (The Book of Why, 2013) tells the story of David Christie and his three children—two of whom have never met. It's a story with many dramatic and tragic turns that would be undercut if revealed in a review, so restraint will be exercised here. When it begins, Christie is running for a U.S. Senate seat from Pennsylvania, and his wife, Danielle, a theater professor at a small college, and his 16-year-old son, Nick, a charming high school football player, are standing in for him at a fundraiser in a mansion on Philadelphia's Main Line. Danielle is putting a good face on it, but she's sick of the whole ordeal. "Soon, she kept thinking, we can go back to normal. She didn't like thinking that way, she knew how David hated to lose, but double digits two weeks out—it would take a miracle." What happens next can hardly be described as a miracle, but it will catapult Christie to victory, and by 1991 he will be running against Bill Clinton and others for the Democratic presidential nomination. However, as this section of the book is titled: "Mistakes Were Made." Montemarano's novel delivers strong, finely detailed characters and puts them in interesting, if unrelentingly painful, situations. On the downside, the texture of the national-politics setting is a little thin and predictable, some key parts of the story are never fully explained (when you finish it, tell us what happened in that car accident), and the creation of temporary unsolved mysteries by jumping back and forth in time can feel a little gimmicky.Though the author may have bitten off more than he can chew here, his good instincts and courage make him a writer to watch.

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Kirkus Reviews (Mon Oct 07 00:00:00 CDT 2024)
New York Times Book Review

Sisters Betsy and Avery have never met, but they have both spent their lives under the scrutiny of prying cameras and tabloid journalists. Their father, David Christie, was a charismatic senator and promising presidential candidate until infidelity destroyed his campaign and his family's life. In the aftermath, Betsy grieves her broken family, while Avery struggles with growing up estranged from her infamous father yet still exposed by the national spotlight. But, years later, as David's health declines, Betsy and Avery are forced to face their complicated feelings about him--and about each other. With delicacy and empathy, Nicholas Montemarano brings these sisters together in a parallel of grief and grace. In The Senator's Children , Nicholas Montemarano brilliantly distills the American family under pressure.


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