Posts Tagged Elizabeth Berg

MAY Boston-area Book Readings of Note

romantic outlaws

Charlotte Gordon
Romantic Outlaws: The Extraordinary Lives of Mary Wollstonecraft and Mary Shelley
Brookline Booksmith
Tuesday, May 5 at 7pm

house of hawthorne

Erika Robuck
The House of Hawthorne
Newtonville Books
Tuesday, May 5 at 7pm

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Sarah McCoy
The Mapmaker’s Children
Brookline Booksmith
Wednesday, May 6 at 7pm

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John Palfrey
BiblioTech: Why Libraries Matter More than Ever in the Age of Google
Harvard Book Store
Thursday, May 7 at 7pm

dream lover

Elizabeth Berg
The Dream Lover
Newtonville Books
Thursday, May 7 at 7pm

daylight marriage

Heidi Pitlor
The Daylight Marriage
Porter Square Books
Thursday, May 7 at 7pm

Erika Robuck
The House of Hawthorne
Sarah McCoy
The Mapmaker’s Children
The Concord Bookshop
Thursday, May 7 at 7pm

everything

Celeste Ng
Everything I Never Told You
Porter Square Books
Tuesday, May 12 at 7pm

hospice

Gregory Howard
Hospice
Brookline Booksmith
Wednesday, May 13 at 7pm

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Anne Enright
The Green Road
Harvard Book Store
Wednesday, May 13 at 7pm

Heidi Pitlor
The Daylight Marriage
Newtonville Books
Thursday, May 14 at 7pm

salinger year

Joanna Rakoff
My Salinger Year
Harvard Book Store
Saturday, May 16 at 7pm

9780374280307

Barney Frank
Frank: A Life in Politics from the Great Society to Same-Sex Marriage
Brookline Booksmith
Thursday, May 21 at 6pm

women of will

Tina Packer
Women of Will
Porter Square Books
Friday, May 22 at 7pm

Mako Yoshikawa
Every Father’s Daughter: Twenty-Four Women Writers Remember their Father
Brookline Booksmith
Saturday, May 23 at 5pm

ISIS

Dr. Jessica Stern
ISIS: The State of Terror
The Concord Bookshop
Thursday, May 28 at 7pm

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book review: The Last Time I Saw You

Title: The Last Time I Saw You
Author: Elizabeth Berg
ISBN: 978-1400068647
Hardcover: 256 pages
Publisher: Random House (April 6, 2010)
Category: contemporary fiction
Review source: publisher
Rating: 3/5

When I read Dream When You’re Feeling Blue by Elizabeth Berg, I cried when I finished it. I also got on the computer and “adopted” a soldier in Iraq and started writing letters to him. I had done the same during the Gulf War in college. That’s how much that story and novel moved me. The Last Time I Saw You, unfortunately, just didn’t do the same. It’s not that I must cry or laugh but I do require some resonance. Maybe I can’t relate to 58-year-olds about to attend their 40th high-school reunion. I’ve been to my 5th, 10th and 15th high-school reunions. The Last Time I Saw You contains a few colorful characters but it dragged at points. Each individual had certain visions of their futures, as we all do. Most seem content, some aren’t. Dorothy has yet to attend a reunion and wants to see her high school crush Peter Decker. Lester, a veterinarian and widower, has a happy life with all the animals in his care. Mary Alice has moved back to her hometown and settled into a quiet life. Candy, a popular girl in high school, realizes [she’s recently been diagnosed with an aggressive form of cancer] that she needs true friends. Pete Decker regrets the separation from his wife and his repeated cheating.

Each expects the reunion to change their lives in some manner. Once this group attends the reunion everyone at first reverts to high school, as always seems to happen at reunions, until everyone realizes that they have grown up and are no longer geeks, jocks, prom queens, and loners [reference to The Breakfast Club— I am such a Gen-Xer]. It might not help that I’ve also been reading The Book of Joe by my contemporary Jonathan Tropper. That novel completely captivates me as it follows a writer who wrote a book about his small town when his father falls ill, 17 years after graduating from high school in 1986. He wrote a book about his senior year and many are not pleased with their depictions in his thinly veiled novel. [I graduated from high school in 1987].

My mom read The Last Time I Saw You before me and she thought there were too many characters. I didn’t find this issue that much as Berg introduces each character quite adeptly at the beginning. The reunion introduces many classmates and there’s that chaotic, frenzied– “hey is that?” and “remember me?”– atmosphere. I’ll continue to read Berg’s novels but The Last Time I Saw You proves to be a bit disappointing.

Elizabeth Berg appears at Brookline Booksmith on April 26, 2010.

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buy at Amazon: The Last Time I Saw You: A Novel

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