I've read other things written by this author, so I was really surprised by how little I cared for this book. Demographically (age, approx kids' ages), I have some things in common with the main character, Eve, and yet, I found her uncompelling, and even hard to believe. In fact, a good way in to the book (200 pages in), I was startled to realize that I still had not developed affection for any on the characters.
Eve's husband, an artist who is evidently temperamental, albeit in the blandest of ways, suddenly takes off across the country--right after date night, while ostensibly driving the college-age sitter home. (The sitter is vaguely undermining of their marriage, but also rather bland and not fleshed-out.) Over the following weeks, Eve lets his phone calls to her go unanswered. Really! She doesn't give in to any temptation to yell at him, or make sure he is OK, or ask what his plans are, or put a guilt trip on him, or ask him about any household business, NOTHING. In fact, she becomes aware that he is texting with her 14 yr old daughter, and she doesn't even peek at the texts. She just decides to soldier on as a single mom, no clue where her husband's head is, not knowing whether this will be permanent. (And unless I missed it, she doesn't seem to be devastated emotionally, nor relieved. Just, eh.) Her journey as single mom is not very compelling, either. She already works, so nothing new to take on there, and when money is a tad tight, she sells one of hubby's sculptures for 10K. No biggie!
Meanwhile, her (again, FOURTEEN YEAR OLD) daughter was insufferable to me as a reader (even right away, before dad's departure has taken a toll). I have a daughter about this age, and I cannot conceive of the dynamic here. "Magnolia" is beyond mouthy--huge chip on her shoulder, very put-upon, sneaky, snotty, vulgar. And the mom just goes with it, rather than seem "dorky and old" by putting her in her place. Wimp! Magnolia bullies her mother, who at one point drives Maggie and a fast-living friend on a mini-shopping spree on Eve's dime for things like a Victoria's Secret push-up bra. The sexy clothes, Magnolia's friend tells Eve, will really show Magnolia's "cock-sucker" ex-boyfriend. Yes, she says this to a mom. And the mom doesn't react. On the way home, Eve lets them hop out of her car to go hang with some creepy-looking grown MEN that Eve doesn't know the names of! And God forbid Eve demand a curfew, or ask for names of people, or details of where they are going. The only time Eve seems ticked is when Magnolia comes home with a nose-piercing that was poorly done by some acquaintance, and it has become infected. I didn't necessarily need for Eve to flip out on her daughter, but the behaviors and choices warranted at the very least, a sit-down conversation. Eve seemed to shrug it off with little more than an eye roll. She could discuss it with her pointless best friend, but Loretta is too self-absorbed with her new baby, so all she seems to want to talk about is how her baby is on and off her "boob."
At any rate, the amount of time I gave this book was disproportionate to what I feel I received from it, and to spend any additional time on this review would be further tipping the scale.