The Bright Side of Disaster: A Novel
The Bright Side of Disaster: A Novel book cover

The Bright Side of Disaster: A Novel

Hardcover – June 26, 2007

Price
$22.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
256
Publisher
Ballantine Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1400066377
Dimensions
6.5 x 1 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.05 pounds

Description

From Publishers Weekly First-time novelist Center nails ornery and opinionated Texas women in this uneven tale of survival of the hardly fit. "It's not how you wanted it, but it's how it is," jilted and pregnant Jenny Harris is advised by her long-divorced mom. "Much of mothering is that way." Jenny's rock and roll wannabe fiancé Dean Murphy ditches her for a woman who died before he had the chance to sleep with her. ("I don't feel the same about you anymore. It's not my fault," he writes in his I'm-outta-here note.) Jenny has little time to nurse the heartbreak; baby Maxie is born the next day, and all Jenny's plans implode. What pulls Jenny through new mom hell is a network of bright, fearless women who thrive despite the bumbling men around them: Jenny's feisty mom with the "big Texas personality," blunt best friend Meredith and single-mom Claudia prove single women needn't be lonely, pathetic or poor. Yet this gaggle of sharp and funny supergals mostly falls apart when it comes to men. There's a rogue's gallery of thinly drawn louts, and from the rabble rises Jenny's dreamboat neighbor John Gardner, a pediatric nephrologist on sabbatical. Dean, of course, reappears, presenting Jenny with a not-difficult dilemma. Center's debut is fast-moving and pleasantly diverting, thanks to sharp dialogue and a narrative that's heavier on the sass than the diaper rash. (July) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved. From Booklist Jenny Harris is nesting in her Houston home with her fiance, Dean, awaiting the birth of their child, to be followed by their wedding. But Dean grows more distant, especially after a coworker dies in a plane crash, and Jenny ends up becoming a single mother. Determined to take good care of her child, she tries to forget about Dean, relegating him to the past. Coping with a baby takes all Jenny's time, so when her perfect single neighbor takes an interest, Jenny is flattered but exhausted. Then, when she finally decides to take a chance and get to know him, Dean comes back into her life. In her stellar first novel, Center paints an accurate and humorous view of motherhood, from the physical changes to lack of sleep and exhaustion as well as the changes in friendships and feelings about men. Patty Engelmann Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved KatherineCenter is the New York Times bestselling author of How to Walk Away and theupcoming Things You Save in a Fire (August 2019), as well as five otherbittersweet comic novels. She writes about how we fall down--and how we get backup. Six Foot Pictures is currently adapting her fourth novel, The Lost Husband,into a feature film starring Josh Duhamel and Leslie Bibb. Katherine has beencompared to both Nora Ephron and Jane Austen, and the Dallas Morning News callsher stories, "satisfying in the most soul-nourishing way." Katherine recentlygave a TEDx talk on how stories teach us empathy, and her work has appeared inUSA Today, InStyle, Redbook, People, Vanity Fair, The Atlantic, Real Simple,Southern Living, and InTouch, among others. Katherine lives in her hometown ofHouston, Texas, with her fun husband, two sweet kids, and fluffy-but-fiercedog. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. 1The end began with a plane crash. Just before midnight on a Tuesday in February. A girl I’d never met or even heard of died, along with her miniature dachshund (under the seat) and a planeload of passengers in the kind of commuter plane I’ll never fly in again. I’ve pictured it a hundred times now: the quiet hum of the motor, the sleeping passengers, the sudden jolt, the cabin steward thrown sideways before he could finish his instructions. In my mind, it always looks like a movie, because I have nothing else to go on.That night, I was asleep, safe on the ground, miles away in Texas in my hand-me-down bed, nestled under a patchwork quilt made out of ties from the seventies.Since getting pregnant, I fell asleep before the double digits. It was something my not-quite-yet-husband, Dean, teased me about. He was a night owl. And I had been one, too. These days, a month before my due date, I was in bed with my swollen ankles up on pillows as soon as the dishes were done. He was out in the living room with his headphones on, likely playing air guitar.In a slightly different situation, I would have heard about the crash on the news and thought no more about it. I am sure that girl meant many things to many people. And though I didn’t know it at the time, and I would not have recognized her if she’d knocked on my door, she meant a lot to me as well—in a roundabout kind of way.The day Dean came home from the office with the news, I’d been out in the garage for hours pricing things with little orange stickers. I’d quit my job at a fancy antiques store a few weeks back at the urging of the owner. She knew I was planning to quit after the baby came, but she decided it didn’t make sense to wait. She took me aside one morning and said that I was, simply, too big. “When you can knock over a piece of Stickley with your belly,” she said, “it’s time to call it a day.” She gave me some coupons for a mani-pedi, promised she’d always give me her dealer discount, and nudged me out the door.So I was home. And planning our upcoming garage sale with checklists, spreadsheets, and a color-coded map of my yard. At thirty-six weeks and counting, what else was I going to do with myself?When Dean walked in with a pizza, I was slumped over the aqua dinette in our kitchen, drinking orange juice and trying for an end-of-the- day rally. He popped open a beer and swigged down about half of it. His tie was wrinkled. Really wrinkled, like it’d been on the floor of his car for days before he’d discovered it. I wondered if it would be my job to see to such things when we were married.He pulled two plates out of the cupboard, and just as I was thinking how much I loved it when Dean brought me pizza, they slid right out of his grip and shattered on the floor.“Fuck!” he shouted. “Fuck!” He turned and slammed his palm against the cabinet.I didn’t say anything. After five years with him, I knew to lay low. My best friend, Meredith, and I called these moments “occasional eruptions of inappropriate rage.” They were, you might say, a part of his charm.He pressed his head against the cabinets, and I set about picking up. I had to bend over my belly to reach the shards, which made great clanks as they hit the metal bottom of the garbage can. When I went for the broom, he moved to his chair and sat down. Then he said, “A girl from work died last night.”“Died?” I said. “How?”“Plane crash.”“Big plane or little plane?” I asked.“Puddle jumper,” he said.I finished sweeping and leaned the broom against the counter. “Who was it?” I asked, sitting down.“Just a girl. She worked in graphics.” He lifted a slice of pizza and took a tentative bite, as if it might not go down well.“Was she somebody you knew?” I asked.“Yeah,” he said, mouth full. “I definitely knew her.” Her cubicle was around the corner from his, and she—her name was Tara—used to stop in and say hi. She had worked there for a year. She had been planning to come see his band.We chewed for a while. Then, not sure what else to say, I shook my head and said, “I thought plane crashes only happened to people on the news.”“Well,” he said. “She’s on the news now.”After dinner, we sat out on the porch swing, as we did many nights. Our house was in one of the few historic neighborhoods in Houston that hadn’t been bulldozed for townhomes or mini-malls. By some mystery, folks in our neighborhood were restoring their houses instead of replacing them. Living here was like living in another place in time.On good nights, we’d go on talking after dinner. But tonight he kept quiet, nursing beer number three. He was holding the memo they’d passed out at work with details about the funeral and where to send donations. It had this girl Tara’s picture on it.She was Asian, with shiny straight hair and kissy lips. The picture was from her company ID photo, but even so, she was smiling as if the guy who’d taken the photo had been flirting with her. She certainly seemed very alive. And she was the kind of pretty that wasn’t up for discussion.“She’s pretty,” I said, looking over his arm.“You think so?”“Dean,” I said, giving him a look that said, Come on. At the time, a little lie like that seemed sweet to me. I assumed he was trying to be a good fiancé by pretending not to know she was pretty. Like he only had eyes for me. “Yes,” I said. “She’s pretty.”“Was,” he said.“Was.”I tried to start up some other conversation after that. I told him that Meredith had bought a leash for her cat. I told him about a report I’d heard on a hurricane in the Gulf. I told him I’d heard a woman singing a version of “Hush Little Baby” on the gospel radio station that afternoon, and the sound had brought tears to my eyes. But the words came out of my mouth and fizzled like sparks before they hit the ground.Some nights were like this, when Dean just couldn’t rise to the conversational challenge. Meredith said he was moody, which was true. But we all had our shortcomings. Still, if we weren’t going to talk, I wished he would rub my neck, or hold my hand. But he didn’t.Dean wanted to take a shower, so I followed him inside. I put on my don’t mess with texas maternity nightshirt before I headed into the kitchen to clean up, and when I got there, I noticed the girl’s picture was on the fridge. Dean had put it up with butterfly magnets, one placed in each corner. Very few things on our overloaded fridge merited more than one magnet. Not our list of frequently called numbers, not the picture of us at a wildflower garden on our road trip to Austin, not the liner notes for Dean’s band’s only album. But there she was, securely placed and there to stay. I wasn’t sure I wanted her there, and I thought about taking her down and sticking her in a drawer with the take-out menus.But I left her. She had the kind of eyes that followed you around the room. I’d thought that happened only with paintings in museums, but here she was, in my kitchen, watching me. While I did the dishes. While I took my prenatal vitamin. While I did a final sweep for pieces of broken plate. She even watched the door for my return while I took the pizza box outside to the trash. Back inside, I turned the dead bolt, started the dishwasher, and stood with my hand on the light switch. We held each other’s gaze for a few minutes, and then I left her in the dark. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • "Charming. . . Cleverly told and uncommonly appealing."- PEOPLE Magazine
  • "Stellar . . . Center paints an accurate and humorous view of motherhood."-Booklist ". . . Bittersweet and utterly authentic . . . Novels as polished and mature
  • as The Bright Side of Disaster
  • just don't come along very often from first-time novelists or, for that matter, from those with much longer résumés."- Dallas Morning NewsJenny Harris always expected that she'd fall in love, get married, and have a baby-in that order. Now, very pregnant and not quite married, she actually doesn't mind that she and her live-in fiancé, Dean, accidentally started their family a little earlier than planned; she's happy to have so much to look forward to. But Dean-whom Jenny loves enough to overlook his bad facial hair, his smoking habit, and his total commitment to a cheesy cover band-is acting distant, and not in a pre-wedding-jitters kind of way. The night he runs out for cigarettes and just doesn't come back, he demotes himself from future husband to sperm donor.And the very next day, Jenny goes into labor.In the months that follow, Jenny plunges into a life she never anticipated: single motherhood. At least with the sleep deprivation, sore boobs, and fits of crying (both hers and the baby's), there's not much time to dwell on her broken heart. And things start looking up. She learns how to do everything one-handed, makes friends in a mommy group, and even manages to give dating tips to her sweet, clueless father-who's trying to court her sassy mother again, fifteen years after their divorce. She also gets to know a handsome, helpful neighbor-with a knack for soothing babies-who invites her out dancing. But Dean is never far from Jenny's thoughts or, it turns out, her doorstep, and in the end Jenny must choose between the old life she thought she wanted and the new life she's been lucky to find.A spirited debut novel with a terrifically appealing voice, a fantastic sense of humor, and a lot of heart, The Bright Side of Disaster reminds us that sometimes it takes the worst-case scenario to show us the best in everything.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(391)
★★★★
25%
(326)
★★★
15%
(195)
★★
7%
(91)
23%
(300)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

When Disaster Strikes, What Happens Next?

What happens to a woman on the verge of giving birth, while her fiancé continues acting as if he is still an adolescent boy? The answers form the story that follows, in a somewhat predictable pattern...boy-man goes out for cigarettes and doesn't return; woman goes into labor the next day; and the saga of treading water in the single mom's world, while trying to recover from heartbreak, could be just another predictable tale.

But Jenny Harris, our single mom, adds that extra spark--her humor, her tenacity, her all-encompassing love--and we find ourselves rooting for her from the very first moment.

Even before the "cad" leaves, we can see the handwriting on the wall and know that he will disappoint. He lolls around the house, sleeping until noon; he stays out late with his boys playing music; he doesn't lift a finger to help his hugely pregnant fiancée set up for the garage sale they're having. So, in a way, we're kind of glad that he leaves. He isn't anything to write home about.

The challenges Jenny faces, even with the support of her "new mommy" group, remind us all of any of the difficulties we've faced in life. We hope and believe that she will triumph.

So what happens to Jenny, once she has accepted that fiancé Dean is not coming back? Does she finally realize that she doesn't want him back, and will she bravely forge new relationships? Or will she totally focus on her baby, this new love who consumes her time and attention?

Discovering what happens next kept me reading until the final page. [[ASIN:0345497961 The Bright Side of Disaster: A Novel]] is not one of those books that we'll clamor about for days to come, but it is thoroughly enjoyable and definitely rates four stars. Perhaps even four-and-a-half.

Laurel-Rain Snow
12 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Lame Story, Pathetic Female Character

This was a lame story. There is nothing interesting, unique or entertaining to keep the reader intrigued. This is a story about a weak, pathetic woman with an idiot boyfriend who dumps her when she is pregnant. New concept? Hardly. Just when you you think she woke up and smelled the coffee, she takes him back. Its the same story all the authors write. There's nothing original. The characters are boring. The book is described as "funny" on cover. I must have missed the humor.

Huge disappointment!!!!!!!!!!
11 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Engaging and Light/Easy Read

Despite the rather misleadingly grim title, I found this book fast and easy reading.

Although one of the main themes of the book is about being a new, single Mom, that's not the only theme. I'm sure those who have been a new mother will find much to identify with here, but I also enjoyed the book despite not having that distinction. There is really something for everyone, with interwoven storylines featuring relationships of every type - family, love and friendship.

I found it a quick, light, yet rich, book to curl up with. I'll look forward to the author's next book, since this is her first.
8 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Highly recommended--

This is a most enjoyable book by a very talented author. This story rings of truth as Jenny Harris, a spunky modern young woman, finds herself overwhelmed by unwanted events cascading down upon her. The characters are well developed and appealing, and the story unfolds with warmth and great humor. At times,I found myself actually laughing out loud. Jenny is a survivor and you will be cheering for her as she copes. I highly recommend this charming book and I look forward eagerly to another by this new author.
7 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Great Book

This is a really great book. It is incredibly moving and funny and lovely and a very quick read. Highly highly recommended.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

One of the best books I ever read

This was one of the best books I've ever read--and I've read a LOT of books! Funny, poignant and real; the plot moves fast, the protagonist is likeable and all the characters are quirky enough to make you either want to laugh at them or slap them. Sometimes both.
I hated to see the book come to an end, and I can't wait until her next one. If you like Jennifer Cruisie, you'll love Katherine Center. I got the book out of the library, but I'm buying myself a copy right away. This is one I know I'll reread over and over. And as a writer myself, all I can say is that I hope my next book is half as good as this one.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Great summer read and for first-time moms

This was a light, fun book for the summer that I thoroughly enjoyed. Being a first time mom, I was able to identify with "Jenny" and I thought Katherine Center's description of those first few months (birth, breast-feeding, exhaustion and all) was spot on! She described this period better than I could articulate it. I plan on buying this book to give away as a baby shower gift for new mommies.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Bright Side is wonderful

I could not put this book down! I inhaled it in 2 days. I kept having to tell my husband why I was laughing or emotional, but then saying, "But you have to read the way it's written, because it's so perfect." I started thinking in the voice of the main character, Jenny Harris--her voice is so strong and her humor is infectious. And I especially loved the best friend Meredith, who never waters down exactly what she thinks. The author's insights into the characters are just so right-on that I felt like I was nodding the whole time. The fights between Dean and Jenny are some of my favorite moments. And the romance with Gardner totally worked for me. I expected the baby's arrival to slow the book down, but the pace never dragged. I was hooked on every page. There was not a false note anywhere. I guess in the romantic comedy genre you would feel cheated if you didn't get a happy ending, but what ends up happening here was so much more satisfying even than what I was dying to have happen.

I haven't had this much fun reading something since Egger's _Heartbreaking Work of Staggering Genius_ or Z.Z. Packer's _Drinking Coffee Elsewhere_, and I think this book is going to have a wider audience among my friends. I think I've been waiting for a book like this (about a pregnant/new-mom protagonist) ever since Frances McDormand's character in the movie _Fargo_ and Maile Meloy's "Garrison Junction" in _Half in Love_ (and ever since I went through pregnancy & new-mom-hood myself). It's such a transformative time, and it's been my whole world recently. The list of people I'm going to recommend this book to got longer and longer the more I read--starting with my friend who's on bed rest for the rest of her pregnancy.
5 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

very funny but too predictable

There were times when I had to put this book down, I was laughing so hard. Unfortunately, the plot was a little too pat. Not only that, I found myself wondering why the very engaging hero was so attracted to Jenny. He was a little too perfect, and their relationship a little too easy. As for why Jenny would tolerate her ex-fiance's return to her life...well, that's where Jenny became a little too dumb for me. Still, I'm glad I read the book, and I look forward to Ms. Center's next work.
4 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Very appealing to everyone

I read it upon request of my girlfriend, who thought it was wonderful. The characters (men & women) are intersting and hilarious and one can see peices of people we all know in each of them. It's not just chick lit, I recommend it to anyone who thinks, loves, and struggles with living life its fullest!
4 people found this helpful