A Wedding in December: A Novel
A Wedding in December: A Novel book cover

A Wedding in December: A Novel

Hardcover – October 10, 2005

Price
$8.65
Format
Hardcover
Pages
336
Publisher
Little, Brown and Company
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0316738996
Dimensions
6.25 x 1 x 9.25 inches
Weight
1.2 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly A Big Chill –like group reunites for a 40-something wedding in this melancholy story of missed opportunities, lingering regrets and imagined alternatives by Shreve ( The Last Time They Met ). Bill and Bridget were sweethearts at Maine's Kidd Academy who rediscovered one another at their 25th reunion. Bridget was already divorced; Bill left his family; the two have now gathered their Kidd coterie to witness their hasty wedding—Bridget has breast cancer—at widow Nora's western Massachusetts inn. The death of charismatic schoolmate Stephen at a drunken high school party hovers over the event. Stephen's then-roommate, Harrison, now a married literary publisher, remains particularly tormented by it, especially since he had (and still has) romantic feelings for Nora, who was Stephen's then-girlfriend. Abrasive Wall Street businessman Jerry, now-out-of-the-closet pianist Rob, single Agnes (who teaches at Kidd and has a secret of her own) and various children round things out. Tensions build as the group gets snowed in, and someone gets drunk enough to say what everyone's been thinking. Though Shreve's plot, characters and dialogue are predictable (as are her inevitable 9/11 rehashes), she sure-handedly steers everyone through their inward dramas, and the actions they take (and don't) are Hollywood satisfying. (Oct. 10) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From School Library Journal Adult/High School–This novel has many of Shreve's hallmarks: simple and elegant prose; characters who are entirely convincing in their portrayals of human fallibility; and a plot buildup with a twist toward the end that packs a wallop. Set in New England several months after 9/11, it is the story of seven former classmates who have not seen one another in 27 years but have come together for the wedding of Bill and Bridget, who dated during high school and then went their separate ways. They have reunited and are getting married in the face of Bridget's advanced breast cancer. Nora, who owns the inn where the wedding will be held, is trying to rebuild her life after the death of her husband. Agnes, Nora's former roommate, has a secret she is desperate to share. Over all of them hangs the specter of Stephen, whose charismatic life and tragic death they seem unable to address head-on. Paralleling the story of these friends is the one in the novel Agnes is writing about the Halifax explosion of 1917, a little-known disaster that resulted in the deaths of almost 2000 citizens. This story-within-a-story not only provides an eye-opening account of a piece of World War I history, but also allows Agnes to address some of her own issues. An understated and graceful exploration of the choices that people make in their day-to-day interactions and their consequences, Wedding is an excellent piece of American literature to add to any library. –Kim Dare, Fairfax County Public Library System, VA Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Bookmarks Magazine All though Shreve has all the elements of her previous successful workx97an engaging plot, intricate period history, ruminations on lost loves, and a grandiose old housex97something falls short in her newest novel. Her characters are variable, some rich, some tiresome. Sometimes the deep, dark secrets seem neither deep nor dark. And the rampant affairs can be wearing. But Shreve still deftly weaves the larger disaster of the Halifax narrative with the personal tragedies of individuals. A Wedding in December , like the movie The Big Chill , still evokes the languorous melancholy of midlife regret. For some, the novel is a guilty pleasure, but the guilt may be too much to bear. Copyright © 2004 Phillips & Nelson Media, Inc. From Booklist Recrimination and regret underlie an emotional reunion of seven former classmates from the Kidd Academy, an elite prep school, who gather at an inn in the Berkshire Mountains for a wedding. Nora, the widow of an abusive, renowned poet and the owner of the inn, has agreed to host the wedding of Bridget, ill with cancer, and Bill, who has divorced his wife to marry his high-school sweetheart. Among the wedding guests are Harrison, still in love with Nora and still reeling from the tragic death of his roommate, a gifted but troubled athlete, at the academy some 27 years earlier, and Agnes, a long-single history teacher with a tumultuous love life. Uncertainties bred in the wake of 9/11 also play a role here, although they are summoned indirectly through a story that Agnes is writing about a ship collision in Halifax Harbor in 1917 that left 2,000 dead and hundreds blinded. Operating with a heightened sense of their mortality, the former classmates regard each other's life decisions with a mixture of envy, wariness, and spite. The skillful, prolific Shreve, who seems to turn out one best-seller per year, seamlessly moves her story between the horrific events of Halifax Harbor and the nearly as horrific reunion, underscoring the fleeting nature of happiness and the painful trade-offs it often requires. Joanne Wilkinson Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved Anita Shreve is the author of many acclaimed novels, including The Last Time They Met, The Pilot's Wife, Sea Glass, All He Ever Wanted, and Light on Snow. She lives in Massachusetts. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • At an inn in the Berkshire Mountains of western Massachusetts, seven former schoolmates gather for a wedding.Bridget, the mother of a fifteen-year-old boy, is marrying Bill - who was her lover at Kidd Academy years ago - after a chance encounter has brought them together again. Nora, the owner of the inn, has agreed to host this reunion of her old friends, a group that was once close as only high school friends can be but was scattered by a tragedy that occurred just before graduation.It is a disparate crew that gathers in the gorgeous winter light. Bridget faces uncertainties about her health and her future that have made this wedding all the more urgent. Nora has recently had to reinvent her life following the death of her renowned husband. Harrison, who still hears echoes from the tragic event at Kidd twenty-seven years ago, has made a life and family for himself in Toronto but is now drawn to Nora even more strongly than he was in the past. These four join Jerry, now a Wall Street banker with a disdainful wife; Rob, a well-loved concert pianist, and his lover, Josh; and Agnes, a history teacher at Kidd Academy who longs to tell a secret she has sworn never to reveal.Throughout the wedding weekend, the guests uncover the choices and chances that have transformed them in the years since high school, and delve for the first time into what really happened the night that changed all their lives. Even as these dramas unfold, Agnes tells another tale, that of the terrible explosion that devastated the city of Halifax during World War I. One young surgeon's feats of heroism during this cataclysm resonate powerfully with present-day events, as he deals with undreamed-of exigencies and makes an agonizing choice between passion and loyalty.So, too, will the friends at Nora's inn be tested by this astonishing weekend of revelation and recrimination, forgiveness and redemption.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(288)
★★★★
25%
(240)
★★★
15%
(144)
★★
7%
(67)
23%
(220)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Serious disappointment from formerly favorite author

This book is hopelessly bad. It is almost as though the author combined all her previously rejected story ideas into one unappealing package. The characters have not been drawn from life and are without authenticity, charm or even passing interest. The basic premise is that a couple being married late in life invites no one to the wedding except five friends from their high school years, most of whom they haven't seen in twenty-seven years. How pathetic is that? And how unlikely! Predictable reunion interfaces occur with multiple allusions to the mysterious death of another classmate. There is no hook to this mystery which of course is fully illuminated at book end. For no apparent reason, the timeframe of the book is immediately following 9/11 instead of today. A lengthy unrelated story within a story is told through a novel in progress by one of the classmates. In fact this secondary story, written around the true event of a munitions ship explosion in Halifax during World War I, is far more interesting than the main plot. And just to drive me completely crazy, this non-English author in a story not set in England insists on repeatedly referring to the characters "tucking into" breakfast, lunch or dinner.
26 people found this helpful
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can't even finish it!

I'm a Shreve fan and was SO looking forward to her new book but it doesn't flow well for me and I just can't seem to get into it after reading 1/2 the book already! The characters blend into each other and one writes a story ~ perhaps the story within the story is confusing to me and I can't get past that. Anyway, I give up and am disappointed. LIGHT ON SNOW, her recent book was better. If you need a great Shreve book to read, go for FORTUNE'S ROCKS! That's my alltime fav of hers.
13 people found this helpful
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Looking for "The Big Chill?" Keep looking...

Having enjoyed both "The Pilot's Wife" and "The Big Chill," I was eager to read this book. Unfortunately, my anticipation was not rewarded. Ms. Shreve's idea for "A Wedding in December" was sound and could have been developed into a terrific book. Instead, she provided the reader with poorly developed characters and an ill-conceived storyline tied to a rather odd "secret" from the group's past. Interspersed within the main theme was a story-within-a-story about several people involved in a historical disaster that had no apparent relevance to the main story. It was out-of-place and, as a result, it consistently served to interrupt what little momentum the main storyline was able to carry from chapter to chapter. To top it all off, the ending fell flat and was unsatisfying, giving the reader no sense of closure. I would not recommend this book and have actually cautioned friends against it.
12 people found this helpful
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Boring!!!

This is the first time I have read Shreve and probably my last. This book was so boring and I had a hard time just finishing it. As stated in other reviews, there wasn't any reason to reference 9/11 so many times. It didn't fit the story. I also thought the explanation of what happened to one of their friends was ridiculous. It may have been realistic, but Shreve could have come up with something more page turning. I'll never get the ten minutes back that it took for me to drive to the libabry and check this book out.
12 people found this helpful
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Let's just pretend this never happened..

I'm such a huge Shreve fan that I preordered this book months in advance and couldn't wait until it came. After reading about 75 pages, it became a chore. The details are so cliche-a group of college friends reunited, old loves lost and refound, a dear friend who died, etc. Then there is a bizarre second storyline about an explosion in Halifax at the turn of the century. That,along with strangly placed references to 9/11 throughout the book made me want to cry (with disappointment).

Anita, I'll wait for your next one, but this time without bated breath.
12 people found this helpful
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What a disappointment........

I was so looking forward to Anita Shreve's next book, as I have read everything she has written. I wanted to love this story, but couldn't even like it. I am half way through the book at this point and will probably not finish it. The story within the story that Agnes is writing ruins the original story which seems to drag in any case. Oh well, maybe next book...........
12 people found this helpful
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Can You Rewrite History? Should You Really Try?

A group of 40-somethings gather at a friend's New England inn for a wedding, a mid-December affair that is fraught with secrets and stories. Histories, personal, private histories, are made clear and rewritten over the course of the wedding weekend, a weekend that should be joyous but instead is clouded with grief, loss and endings.

One character, the cancer-ridden bride Bridget, would be the center of attention in a typical romance novel. But here, her wedding day is overshadowed by her old friends. Married publisher Harrison still loves high school crush Nora, who owns the inn and is hosting the weekend. Sturdy Agnes spends her time harboring a secret passion while rewriting history in a story in her journal. Businessman Jerry rubs everyone the wrong way, but he clearly is haunted by post 9/11 life in New York City and his own marital woes. And the entire group tiptoes around the ghost of their high school friend who died a horrible, drunken death, just before graduation.

At times this book reminds us of The Big Chill. (Yes this is a wedding, not a funeral, but there is death in the air, and just as many mixed signals and sadness).

Shreve's writing style is clear and precise. There are volumes spoken in the simplest descriptions of a waitress, of melting ice on a branch.

Mostly the story is heartbreaking. The characters are facing their mortality, facing up to events they didn't experience because were too ignorant or cowardly or unlucky. The questions remain, Can you ever alter the course of your life? At what cost? When does your life's "non-stories," or paths not taken, become unbearable?

This is a book that will resonate with middle-aged readers who may be questioning their decisions. For me, a most poignant paragraph came on the last page, when one character was watching the departure of another newlywed couple.

"They had it all before them, he thought. Uncommon beauty. Thrilling risk. The love of children. A sense of rupture. A diagnosis. Relief from pain. Great love. Betrayal. Grand catastrophe."

One wonders if Shreve perhaps wrote that first, and based the rest of her tale on those very words.
10 people found this helpful
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The Big Chill without the humor or happy ending

I found this book to be terribly depressing-not one of the main characters is content with life and even though this is a special reunion of college friends none of them seem to really like each other. They are all miserable for one reason or another and have no interest in these former friends with the exception of one man that longs for a crush he once had and seems willing to throw away a lifetime with his wife and children for a chance with her. The secrets (one character's death and another's 20+year affair with a married man) are a big let down. Neither of them warrant being a big secret, and truth be told I don't think any of the other characters would have cared. One of the characters is writing a historical-fiction novel so just as this one is moving along, "her" story begins, which sometimes takes up half of the chapter. (AND it is a depressing one as well!!) One of the spouses is snobbed because they think she is a trophy wife, then when the truth comes out that she is the VP of a major corp. they don't like her because they think shes a snob. None the less, I was hoping the book would redeem itself (I gave it 1 star because I kept reading it to the end to see if the ending would change my mind.) When I returned it to the library today the Librarian asked if I liked the book. I answered that I did not and she replied this book has had a tremendous amount of "holds" placed on it, yet when it is returned, not one reader has liked it.

I enjoyed the Pilot's Wife, but this one is not worth wasting the precious little time you have to read.
8 people found this helpful
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La la la...connect the dots...PLEASE!

I was very disappointed in Shreve's latest effort.

This book is so disjointed, with: characters I never came to care about, men speaking in a woman's voice (I kept thinking - come on - what guy talks like this?), a bizzarre interjected story one of the characters is writing (which just made me go - huh? and skip over it), strange dialogue about 9/11, and a weird supposed cliff-hanger ending, which made me think - who really cares? These self-involved idiots need to get better excuses to cheat on their spouses than former infatuation, even if it was around a tragedy - grow up! This was a throw it across the room when you're finished reading it book.
8 people found this helpful
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pretty pointless and definitely boring

Shreve may have had a good idea with what she WANTED the point to be, but the book never makes it there. Definitely not worth the time I spent trying to get into it.
8 people found this helpful