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Happy now? /

by Shonk, Katherine.
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Published by : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, (New York :) Physical details: 262 p. ; 22 cm. ISBN: 0374281432 Subject(s): Widows --Fiction. | Humorous fiction. Year : 2010
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Item type Location Collection Call Number Status Date Due
Circulating Glouster Adult Fiction AF Shonk (Browse Shelf) Available
Circulating Nelsonville Adult Fiction AF Shonk (Browse Shelf) Checked out 06/10/2010
Circulating The Plains Adult Fiction AF Shonk (Browse Shelf) Available
Circulating Wells (Albany) Adult Fiction AF Shonk (Browse Shelf) Checked out 08/30/2010
Circulating Athens Adult Fiction AF Shonk (Browse Shelf) Checked out 07/28/2010

From Product Description:

HOW FAR WILL WE GO TO DENY  THE DARKER SIDE OF OUR RELATIONSHIPS? HOW MUCH WILL WE RISK TO BE HAPPY?

After many lonely years and alarming Internet dates, Claire Kessler, an artist and self-proclaimed homebody, believed she had found the perfect man. Jay was earnest, romantic, and gainfully employed, and within a year they were married.

Less than two years later, Jay had killed himself.

On Valentine’s Day.

Happy Now? follows Claire’s chaotic and often tragicomic journey through the weeks that follow her husband’s suicide. Nomie, Claire’s pregnant younger sister, welcomes Claire into her guesthouse and abandons her own husband in solidarity. Claire’s father turns into a concerned stalker, trailing her every movement. Encounters with well-meaning therapists go horribly awry, and Jay’s abandoned cat goes on a hunger strike. All the while, Jay’s suicide note lurks on the coffee table, waiting for Claire to gather the courage to read it. As she struggles to confront the truth about her marriage, Claire also struggles to negotiate life as a young widow—the well-intentioned remarks, the sympathy bouquets, and the terrifying prospect of dating (and loving) again.

With wit and compassion, Katherine Shonk explores both the possibilities and the limitations of human relationships. Happy Now? is an uncommonly honest portrait of love, loss, and letting go.
Katherine Shonk is the author of The Red Passport, a Chicago Tribune Best Book of the Year. Her writing has appeared in Best American Short Stories and Tin House. She works as an editor and writer for Harvard University and lives in Chicago with her husband.
After many lonely years and alarming Internet dates, Claire Kessler, an artist and self-proclaimed homebody, believed she had found the perfect man. Jay was earnest, romantic, and gainfully employed, and within a year they were married.
 
Less than two years later, Jay had killed himself.
 
On Valentine’s Day.
 
Happy Now? follows Claire's chaotic and often tragicomic journey through the weeks that follow her husband’s suicide. Nomie, Claire’s pregnant younger sister, welcomes Claire into her guesthouse and abandons her own husband in solidarity. Claire's father turns into a concerned stalker, trailing her every movement. Encounters with well-meaning therapists go horribly awry, and Jay's abandoned cat goes on a hunger strike. All the while, Jay's suicide note lurks on the coffee table, waiting for Claire to gather the courage to read it. As she struggles to confront the truth about her marriage, Claire also struggles to negotiate life as a young widow—the well-intentioned remarks, the sympathy bouquets, and the terrifying prospect of dating (and loving) again.
 
With wit and compassion, Katherine Shonk explores both the possibilities and the limitations of human relationships. Happy Now? is an uncommonly honest portrait of love, loss, and letting go.
"Happy Now? begins just after Jay's wake and follows Claire as she tries to make sense of what has happened and what will be. The novel vividly captures the sense of dislocation and disenfranchisement that must surely accompany such a loss . . . The wandering narrative effectively serves to keep the reader slightly off balance in the way we imagine Claire herself must be as she grapples with finding meaning, if not exactly 'happiness,' in the here and now as well as some sense of hope for the future."—Karen Campbell, The Boston Globe
 
"Anyone who has passed up a popcorn car-chase flick in favor of a good indie knows how powerful a simple, skillfully told, character-driven story can be. Katherine Shonk does, and Happy Now?, her first novel, is proof . . . Shonk's incisive writing feels effortless, at times stealthy. She's so economical in her descriptions—of a character's mannerisms, clothes, psyche—that she can evoke a resonant image in the space of a sentence. And in delving into Jay's profession, his depression, Claire's denial, and her family's many forms of dysfunction, Shonk raises compelling questions about the influence of pop psychology. No matter how clued in we are to our emotional baggage and childhood scars, Shonk seems to ask, isn't it basic human nature that at the end of the day, we simply feel what we feel—and what we must?"—Rachel Rosenblit, Elle
 
"Claire Kessler's husband of fewer than two years commits suicide on Valentine's Day. How can she not take that personally? In this debut novel, Shonk writes about Claire's first weeks following the suicide. After the funeral, Claire, suddenly a widow, moves into her pregnant sister's carriage house along with her late husband's traumatized cat. As flowers arrive, friends leave phone messages and food, and Claire's family rallies around her, each in his or her own way, Claire starts to process difficult truths about her husband's depression and their relationship . . . In Claire Kessler, Shonk has managed to create a wonderfully realistic character and a story poignant and witty rather than melancholy and dark. Recommended for readers who enjoy women's literature with themes of love and loss by authors such as Anne Tyler, Anne Patchett, and Anita Shreve."—Shaunna Hunter, Hampden-Sydney College, Vriginia, Library Journal
 
"With gentle humor and a complex heroine, Shonk's confident first novel uses a light hand to sketch out some dark truths. Sensitiveand engrossing portrayal of the grieving process that never resorts to cliche."—Publishers Weekly

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A wonderful book

08/15/2010

I thought this book was wonderfully written. Witty in all sorts of unexpected moments and authentic about how real people feel, act, and react. I truly cared for each character ... each was human, flawed, and likable. I'm not a literary expert but something about this book reminded me of Ann Patchett's novels, whose work I also really love and admire. Hard to believe this is Shonk's first novel and looking forward to what comes next.

Loss

07/10/2010

Short story writer Katherine Shonk's first novel is titled Happy Now? and in it she presents a well-developed character, Claire Kessler, in the months following the Valentine's Day suicide of her husband, Jay. Claire's confusion, shock and disorientation become supported by the cast of characters who try to provide her with support as she searches for understanding and some way to live again. While few readers face such dramatic tragedy in our own lives, the way in which Shonk presents family relationships will resonate with most readers, and the fine writing encourages readers to empathize with Claire and with those who are proving her support in her grief. <br /> <br />Rating: Three-star (Recommended) <br />

Excellent

07/07/2010

Shonk provides an amazing character in Claire, and captures us with her understanding of the complexities facing Claire after her husband's suicide. Her ability to capture characters, the nature of professors, and the (thinly disguised) Northwestern University campus are very impressive. Shonk's penetrating understanding of the psychology of her characters makesthis a wonderful book.

The stuff of chick-lit at its best.

07/03/2010

For me, when writing is great, it illuminates the human condition. Yes, it can change us, yes it can transport us, yes it can get us to consider what we may have been ignoring or denying. <br /> <br />But first and foremost, beyond all of the above, beyond its entertainment value (though sometimes hand-in-hand with it), great writing illuminates...then leaves it to the reader to make of that illumination what they will. (The unspoken notion of the writer-reader collaboration in full-effect.) <br /> <br />'Happy Now?' illuminates wonderfully. Wonderfully, effectively, with vim and vigor, with wryness, with a certain picante style that's endemic to chick-lit, with a great writer's ability to take you by the hand and tell you a story in a way that you're caught up in it (and I'm not referring to the 'things that happen' here, I'm talking about the writer's 'oomph') so much that the the pleasures of being told a story in this way, the stuff of the story itself and the illumination it all provides is exceedingly enjoyable. <br /> <br />Ms Shonk accomplishes all this with her novel about a woman who is left behind when her husband takes his life on Valentine's Day. <br /> <br />She also accomplishes something quite admirable: she gets inside the mind of a depressive, someone who commits suicide, and presents their reality not only convincingly, but authentically. Additionally, the insight provided by how other characters respond was brilliant, illustrating just how little we understand about someone battling depression, how the suicidal mind works, and how applying the expectations of a 'rational' person's behaviour is the saddest variety of lunacy imaginable. So kudos for her on these counts, as well. <br /> <br />Finally, I want to applaud the author for maintaining her approach throughout the novel. One of simplicity, one of a pared-down vista...seeing things through a pin-hole, if you will. This is Claire's story, nobody else's, not the husband who makes such a violent exit, not the two fractured families she is left with, not even the therapists involved, nor the orphaned cat, Fang. Ms Shonk maintained her focus, her scope, hardly ever veering from her very specific path, and thereby creating an enormously more impactful story for us to read, rather than the one that would have resulted had she gotten off-track. <br /> <br />Don't be fooled by the tone of 'Happy Now?', which is chock-full of 'wry' and 'gently acerbic' and 'glib'. There's an enormous amount of illumination of the human condition going on. I consider myself fortunate to have been witness to it, to have come across this novel. I look forward to her next with no small amount of anticipation. <br /> <br />Personal rating: 9/10

Had such great potential, and then it did a huge bellyflop!

07/01/2010

I was so excited about this book, it was so different, and interesting. It had such a great build up, and then, it was over! There was so much more that the author could have done with this book. Such a disappointment. I wish she would re-write it!