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Isabel's Bed

Isabel's Bed

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $10.50
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A book about friendship between 2 very different women
Review: I loved the book especially because it has a blond bombshell / sex goddess who also turns out to be a caring and loyal woman who values her female friends (not the stereotype). Lots of humor and hopeful romance thrown for good measure. Nice to find a book with provocative topics that finds humor but avoids the satirical hard edges that I was expecting.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: Enjoyable but trivial (but enjoyable!)
Review: If you like Anne Tyler's books (The Accidental Tourist, etc.), then you'll love this story of an unlikely friendship.

Unemployed, broke, and recently broken up with her boyfriend, Harriet Mahoney applies for a job as ghostwriter of the autobiography of Isabel Krug. The job comes with decent pay and a room in Isabel's house on Cape Cod. An aspiring but unpublished writer, Harriet jumps when she is offered the position.

Isabel is benignly goofy and her life story includes having her lover shot while in bed with her, by his wife. Harriet slowly comes out of her shell as she settles into life on Cape Cod and friendship with the dotty Isabel Krug. Eccentric characters come and go as Harriet lets go of her tightly-wound self-image and--following Isabel's example--lightens up.

There's no great moral lesson in this book, just lots of laughs, warm smiles, and characters you'd love to share a cup of tea (or, more likely, a bottle of wine) with.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: So Enjoyable
Review: Isabel and Harriet--what a divine combination these two characters create. Admittedly, I am a Elinor Lipman fan and would probably read, with relish, an account of her brushing her teeth, but I thoroughly enjoyed this book. With a bizarre murder in the background, it was great fun to see two distinctly different female characters grown from strangers to friends. And as a 'would-be' writer, it was great fun to read about another 'would-be' realistically. More Elinor, please.

Rating: 1 stars
Summary: So Very Boring
Review: Isabel Krug, the witty and charming woman of her 40's, is quite well known for a publicized affair. Her affair with a rich and famous man named Guy leads to his murder by his wife when she catches them in the act. Determined to write an autobiography, "The Isabel Krug Story", she sets out for a ghost-writer. The respondant to her ad is a mello woman, also in her 40's, named Harriet. When Harriet retreats to Isabel's house on the cape, she is at first surprised at her outgoing and open attitude. But after the two grow on each other, they have quite the adveture and teach each other a lot about life. Humorous and addicting, this is a great read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly Recommended
Review: ISABEL'S BED by Elinor Lipman
October 10, 2004

Two women bond and become unlikely friends in ISABEL'S BED, my introduction to the writing of Elinor Lipman. This book has made me a fan for life, and although I've been told most of her books are as good as this one, I can imagine that a "bad" book by Lipman will still be a passable read.

Harriet Mahoney finds herself going nowhere in the world of writing. Her dream is to have a book published, and she is currently writing a novel based on her parents' life. She belongs to a writing group, where she does not feel she totally belongs, and she is in a long-term relationship with a man that only cares about his bagel business.

Harriet soon finds herself without a boyfriend and without a place to stay. She and Kenny had been together for twelve years, when he tells her he's met someone else, the love of his life and they are now engaged to be married. Out of the blue, she gets an offer to ghost write a story by an infamous adulteress, Isabel Krug, and Harriet finds herself moving into a mansion in a New England town called Truro. The neighbors despise the mansion for being "more Malibu than Cape Cod". But Harriet loves her new home, and is now on her way to getting to know her new employer, who was in bed with her married lover when his wife shot him to death.

Isabel Krug is a woman of mystery. What's not mysterious about her is her need for attention and drama in her life. It is evident in her choice of men (two of whom were married at the time she got involved with them) and her desire to write a book about the murder that made her famous. Harriet suspects that she was hired not just to write this story for Isabel, but to be a companion to this woman, who lives alone with her handy-man Pete, and a man Harriet later finds out is her husband, Costas. Isabel needs Harriet just as much as Harriet needs Isabel.

As Harriet learns more about the murder of Guy Van Fleet, the more she learns about Isabel and her wild and crazy past. Lipman has a knack for writing witty and intelligent passages and I found myself laughing throughout the book. Lipman also does a wonderful job building up the character of Isabel Krug, who was larger than life but yet written in quite a believable fashion. What I loved most of all was the friendship that developed between Harriet, the very insecure writer with low self-esteem, and Isabel, who was beautiful and glamorous and belonged with the rich and famous. Lipman paints Isabel as a woman in need of attention, but someone who is compassionate and understanding, too. Harriet grows with the help of Isabel, as she slowly gains confidence in herself and finds out truly what makes her happy, and it isn't her "passion" for writing. ISABEL'S BED is highly recommended by this reader!

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Not great
Review: Poor storyline made it boring and I never loved the characters, as I almost always do. Not a favorite.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Really warmed to this book as I went on
Review: The blurbs on the cover of this book really put me off at first - someone on the front cover saying that 'by about page ten the reader has a grin on his face' and on the back something about her being the new Jane Austen - etc etc. While being none of those things to me though, I found a lot else in it which grew on me as the book progressed, and surprising to myself I found that I couldn't put it down - and reading to the finish I found it a fun, and infinitely satisfying read.

The heroine of the novel is Harriet Mahoney - 42, failed in a long term relationship, aspiring novellist and looking for a way to escape New York and her ex-partner for a while - wound-licking stuff. She applies for a position ghost-writing Isabel Krug's life story - the fact that she has no idea just who Isabel is, or how notorious her story is, is the subject of the book. Harriet goes to live with her at Cape Cod and in fact it is the growing relationship between these two women which was for me, the most interesting part of the book. As we learn more about Harriet we also have more of Isabel revealed. Its all done in context of the novel and some of it is quite startling. One thing I'll say for Elinor Lipman is she really knows how to tell a story without over-killing points - but she is also wonderful at providing great twists to the story at various points.

It really is an 'engaging' read, but it might take you more than 10 pages to get into. I certainly didn't find I was grinning for a week - but I found it a great read and I think itsworth perservering with if you aren't immediately grabbed by it.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A book with heart
Review: This is a book I find to be wonderfully layered with truth. On the surface it's a funny and light-hearted. But as you read deeper into the novel you find that it is more then just laughs and giggles. Isabel's Bed has a lot of heart and tells a good story. Harriet Mahoney comes to terms with her writing ability, her relationship with her X-boyfriend; she finds new friends and a new home. Through her struggles you see that it isn't necessary to write a published book or have a high paying job or a degree in a University to make you happy. You just have to find your own voice and live it out loud and that's what Harriet Mahoney did. It's really an enjoyable read and who can't help but love this book?

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Highly-charged entertainment!
Review: What a wonderful novel! This book had everything - romance, intrigue, friendship and revenge. Such a great combination. I really did love this book, a second for me by Elinor Lipman, and much semi-drivel that was The Inn at Lake Devine.

One thing bothered me about Isabel's Bed - the absence of you-know-who by the end of the book. The Itzy-Hare-Pete-Costas combination should have ended with a collective bang!

Needless to state, I highly recommend this book! It's a light and fast read, packed with humour and realism.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A book about friendship between 2 very different women
Review: Witty and tender, Lipman's third novel treats lightly of love, mid-life crises, failure and new beginnings.

The narrator-protagonist, Harriet Mahoney, a Jewish-Catholic New Yorker transplanted from Boston, is jilted at age 41. "There went twelve years: my youth. In three months, he was married."

Floundering, she overhears a stranger on the subway, " 'There are no guarantees in this world, but chances are that people who take out ads in the New York Review of Books aren't idiots or crooks.' "

And that's how she ends up in Truro, Mass., in winter, sharing an ultra-modern mansion on the ocean with glamorous Isabel Krug who needs a ghost writer to capitalize on her one claim to fame - her intimate connection with murder. Isabel's rich and older lover had been shot by his wife when she caught them in her bed.

Harriet is confident of her ability to write this book - eventually. First there's the research, which may take a while. Harriet is a long-term veteran of writing groups whose members' idea of success is an encouraging letter from an agent.

Meanwhile, Harriet is meeting the other denizens of the house. Pete, 36, the man of all work, is a local fisherman, complete with (irritating after a while) accent. Harriet finds him attractive but is painfully aware of the difference in their ages. Costas, a mildly sinister, repugnant and brooding figure, is Isabels' husband. A prominent painter, he was disgraced in the art world when it was discovered that his photo realistic paintings were, in fact, photos touched up with paint.

Harriet, a rather conservative, self-effacing creature, is soon cooking all the meals and fretting over her ambiguous and unpaid position. Encouraged by Pete, she makes tentative steps towards self-assertion. Then "With Pete gone I was free to be apologetic. 'Is that okay with you? If we discuss some things?' "
But Harriet is open to influence. With Isabel's flamboyant urging, she gets a haircut, modifies her wardrobe, becomes just daring enough to call a man from her former writing group.

However, failure isn't through with Harriet yet. Despite the engaging banter and dizzy characters, Lipman has her gaze firmly fixed on reality and Harriet gets another dose of it. If this lighthearted and clever novel has a flaw it's the ease with which Harriet adjusts to devastating disappointments - she reacts more like a 25-year-old than a woman in her 40s.

Lipman's writing is snappy and quick, her characters outrageously loopy but with enough mystery to make them believable. Within the convolutions of a spiraling plot, Harriet grows and blossoms, leaving the reader satisfied and vastly entertained.


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