The Heirs: A Novel
The Heirs: A Novel book cover

The Heirs: A Novel

Hardcover – May 23, 2017

Price
$16.95
Format
Hardcover
Pages
272
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1101904718
Dimensions
6.5 x 1.25 x 9.5 inches
Weight
1.15 pounds

Description

Praise for The Heirs : "Both original and moving — and a whole lot of fun...With grace and finesse, Rieger (whose previous novel was The Divorce Papers ) swings effortlessly from character to character... the major players are so richly alive, their search for the truth so absorbing, that you might tear some pages in your rush to turn them." — New York Times Book Review “Elegant literary prose and supremely likeable characters make this a must-read.” — People "Fans of Salinger's stories about Manhattan's elite will enjoy this novel about privileged siblings who grapple with the state of their inheritance and long-held secrets that emerge in the wake of their father's death." — InStyle “Love and sex and money and betrayal make for excellent storytelling. And The Heirs has all of that... As an exploration of the hidden lives of Rupert and Eleanor Falkes, it is a posh soap opera written by Fitzgerald and the Brontes. As a window on a family shaken by death, it is The Royal Tenenbaums , polished up and moved across town. But its beauty, economy and expensive wit is all its own.” — NPR.org “Speaking of intrigue, who doesn’t love a good family drama? As the next step to summer reading bliss, turn off daytime TV and pick up a book that gives you the same kind of thrill without making you feel your brain’s turned to junk. Rieger’s The Heirs is about the secrets and lies that threaten to consume the Falkes family, moneyed Manhattanites with a flawless educational pedigree.”xa0— Brit + Co “…a thoroughly engaging family saga and an incisive probe into the upper crust of Manhattan society—a slice of Edith Wharton transported to the 21st century… Rieger’s intimate look at this intriguing family is an erudite and witty take on a social circle that most readers can only imagine.” — Bookpage “Brilliantly constructed and flawlessly written…an emotional and satisfying story of how a complicated family and their outliers handle life’s most pivotal moments.” — Library Journal , starred review "[An] assured novel of family, money, and secrets, reminiscent in theme and tone of Edith Wharton…just in time for poolside reading, this elegant novel wears its intelligence lightly.” — Kirkus , starred review "Rieger wrestles perceptively with difficult questions and...xa0shines incrementally increasing light on the Falkes’ extended web of familial and emotional ties, sucking the reader into the tangle of emotions and conflicting interests...xa0a tense, introspective account of looking for truth, and instead finding peace." — Publishers Weekly , starred review "Told both in flashbacks and at the turn of the millennium, there’s something timeless about this family drama; take it back 100 years, and it would easily fit in among the novels of the Gilded Age. It is a charming, slightly haunting look at a family dealing with the inheritance of legacy rather than money and wondering if what happens after a relationship matters as much as how it was experienced at the time." — Diana Platt, Booklist "Susan Rieger is thrillingly erudite and compulsively readable, a satisfying combination hard to find in any section of the bookstore. The Heirs is an absorbing page-turner, full of sex and secrets, and I loved getting to know the entire Falkes clan. —Emma Straub, New York Times bestselling author of Modern Lovers "What a sure-footed and unfoolable writer Susan Rieger is--and what a great book The Heirs is.xa0 Unstoppably entertaining and astute, it describes its characters--the charismatic fauna of old, upper class New York--with a strange, merciless sympathy.xa0 Wonderful stuff." —Joseph O'Neill, author of Netherland and The Dog Selected Praise for The Divorce Papers , by Susan Rieger: “Ingenious setup and voyeuristic pleasures...Rieger excavates the humor and humanity from a most bitter uncoupling.” —Emily Giffin, New York Times Book Review “Fresh and lively… Smart and wonderfully entertaining… The power and canniness of this bittersweet work of epistolary fiction pulls you along… [T]his portrait of a divorce makes for serious, yet charming, entertainment… A dramatic intertwining of the law and human feelings.” —Alan Cheuse, NPR “In her clever modern twist on the epistolary form, Rieger excavates the humor and humanity from a most bitter uncoupling.” —Editor's Choice, New York Times Book Review “Brims with brio and wit.” —Entertainment Weekly “This comedy of manners... unfolds through e-mails, legal briefs, handwritten notes, and interoffice memos... the texts offer a provocative glimpse of how intimately our documents reveal us.” —New Yorker “Rieger writes with such facility and humor in so many voices… [A]n excellent yarn about the nature of love, insecurity and commitment.” — Minneapolis Star Tribune “A witty first novel… The engaging tale…provid[es] all the voyeuristic pleasure of snooping through someone else’s inbox.” — People “A fantastic book...excellent.” — Jezebel “Whip-smart… The characters are hilarious and brilliant.” — Lucky SUSAN RIEGER is the author of the 2014 novel The Divorce Papers .xa0 She is a graduate of Columbia Law School and has worked as a residential College Dean at Yale and as associate provost at Columbia. She lives in New York City with her husband, the writer David Denby. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Chapter 1 Eleanor He that dies pays all debts. William Shakespeare, The Tempest When he was dying, Rupert Falkes had the best care money could buy. His wife, Eleanor, saw to that. After the last round of chemo failed, she installed him in New York–Presbyterian in a large, comfortable, private room with a window facing the Hudson. She could have put him in hospice but she knew that in his rare moments of lucidity, he’d want to be in a hospital. He’d fought the prostate cancer tooth and nail, and even when it took over his bones, inflicting almost unbearable pain, he fought on. He wasn’t ready to go. He was only sixty-five. “Why can’t you stop them,” he had said to the oncologist when the third off-label drug didn’t shrink the tumors. He fiddled with his wedding ring, worrying it like a loose tooth. The doctor gave a small guilty shrug. He was out of drugs and words. “How much time do I have?” Rupert said. “Will I see in the millennium?” It was a week to Thanksgiving. The doctor nodded cautiously. “If things progress as I expect, you should make it, with a bit to spare.” Rupert rubbed the top of his head, shiny and bald from the chemo. “I remember when Nixon declared war on cancer. It must have been thirty years ago.” He shook his head. “I voted for the bugger.” Eleanor’s sons--she had five--knew her as playful, even mischievous, but in the presence of others, even close friends, she rarely revealed that part of her, except in her sly, darting wit. The qualities that drew people to her were her democratic manners, her openhandedness, and her attention to the comfort of others. Often, these qualities passed mistakenly for charm, but charm is natural, innate, a gift. Eleanor was like a ballet dancer; what she did was hard work, born of arduous training, made to look as effortless as breathing. As she had always reliably primed the social pump, so she made Rupert’s last months easier for everyone. She bought Starbucks cards, spa gift certificates, pizza, and wine for all the aides, porters, and nurses on the floor. Rupert had always been fastidious--understandably, Eleanor thought, but overly--and though he slept most of the time, she rallied the staff to spare him the indignities of his body’s failing systems. The aides kept him spotlessly clean, changing his diapers and sheets when they needed changing, and turning him over gently to prevent bedsores. The porters took care as they mopped and scoured not to bump his bed. The nurses were attentive, never stinting on the morphine. Unless he was so medicated that he barely breathed, Rupert couldn’t bear touch. Most days, Eleanor was unable to tell if Rupert sensed anything other than pain. Still, three times a week, she brought in fresh flowers, unseasonal and riotous, to put at his bedside; and she kept a radio humming by his ear, tuned to WQXR. Every afternoon she looked in to see him and read him short stories, Updike, Cheever, Munro. His doctors made it a point to drop by when she was there. Afterward, she often went to the movies. Eleanor belonged to that class of New Yorker whose bloodlines were traced in the manner of racehorses: she was Phipps (sire) out of Deering (dam), by Livingston (sire’s dam) and Porter (dam’s dam). Born in 1938, during the Depression, to parents who had held on to their money, she was never allowed to buy anything showy or fashionable. It had to be good and it might be costly, but not obviously so to someone outside the walls of New York’s Four Hundred families. She went to Brearley because the women in her father’s family had gone there and because Brearley girls wore shapeless, navy, hand-me-down, Catholic-school uniforms and brown oxfords. Eleanor’s upbringing had been conducted by a martinet mother and a succession of brisk English nannies who drilled her daily on grammar, hygiene, deportment, and dress. In truth, she wasn’t so much raised up as subjugated, yoked to a set of rules and rituals that rivaled Leviticus for their specificity, rigor, piety, and triviality. On the subject of manners, Mrs. Phipps swore by Emily Post’s diktat that the Chief Virtue of Children was Obedience. No young human being, any more than a young dog, has the least claim to attractiveness unless it is trained to manners and obedience. The child that whines, interrupts, fusses, fidgets, and does nothing that it is told to do, has not the least power of attraction for any one.u2008.u2008.u2008. When possible, a child should be taken away the instant it becomes disobedient. It soon learns that it cannot “stay with mother” unless it is well-behaved. This means that it learns self-control in babyhood. When, years later, at Vassar, Eleanor read Mrs. Post’s 1922 monumental Etiquette in a sociology class, she saw the “it” as the key to her upbringing. She wrote her term paper on obedience, “Portrait of the Debutante as a Young Dog.” Her professor gave her an A. His only comment was: “So, Miss Phipps, what do you think it would have been for you, as one raised under authoritarian principles, in WWII? Hitler Youth? White Rose? Kinder, Küche, Kirche?” Eleanor showed her roommate. “The creep is flirting and insulting me at the same time,” she said. Mrs. Phipps, had she known, would have bridled at the “authoritarian” epithet the professor had so slickly applied to Eleanor’s upbringing. She was no narrow dogmatist, doing unto Eleanor as had been done unto her. She never struck Eleanor or locked her in a closet or made her stand in the corner. Her childrearing regimen was up-to-the-minute and scientific, based on the soundest principles of “child development.” An early and avid subscriber to Parenting magazine, she was a votary of the psychologist J. B. Watson and kept his book Psychological Care of Infant and Child by her bedside. She took to heart his nostrums against hugging and kissing and often quoted to Eleanor his most famous axiom: “Mother love is a dangerous instrument that can wreck a child’s chance for future happiness.” Everything she did was for Eleanor’s own good. Deference to males, no matter their age, was an article of faith in the Phipps household, and by the time she was twelve, Eleanor, with no show of temper, would lose regularly at tennis to boys who weren’t nearly as good as she was. With similar equanimity, she would never argue with a boy or, worse, correct him, no matter how thick he was. At most she’d allow herself a “Do you think so,” then clear her throat. Mrs. Phipps took the hard line against female intelligence, thinking it suspect in a woman, unpardonable in a girl. Vulgarity was the besetting sin, the mark of the ill-bred, covering a range of behaviors extending well beyond conspicuous consumption to reading French novels, confusing a fish fork with a dessert fork, nodding off at the opera, using “lay” instead of “lie,” and wearing white shoes after Labor Day. Adolescence offered no escape for Eleanor from the maternal dragnet except in furtive play. Pre-Kinsey, she didn’t have a name for it; she only knew she wasn’t to do it. “No decent person does it,” Mrs. Phipps told her. “Only perverts.” Eleanor’s response, by now second nature, was to slip into silence, which passed for submission, and take long baths. Her mother always blamed Vassar for Eleanor’s marriage to Rupert, and certainly it contributed to her general “Bolshiness,” as her mother called it. In truth, the path was laid down when she was sixteen in a setting Mrs. Phipps would have thought, if not entirely wholesome, then safe enough. Eleanor was spending the night at the home of a Brearley classmate, Clarissa Van Vliet. Clarissa’s parents, despite impeccable antecedents, were by Mrs. Phipps’s lights “Bohemian.” They lived on the Upper West Side, not the Upper East. Their living room bookshelves held books and not antique Chinese export pottery. Their three children, ages eleven to sixteen, regularly ate dinner with their parents. They socialized with Jews and homosexuals. That evening at dinner, Mrs. Van Vliet directed her conversation toward Clarissa and her guest, telling them about “a terrific book” she was rereading, D. H. Lawrence’s Women in Love. “It’s as good as I remember--I first read it when I was at Vassar, English 225, I think,” she said. “The professor was advanced.” Her husband looked up from his plate, amused. “Very advanced, even for Vassar. Isn’t it what we called in my day a ‘dirty’ book?” he asked. “Well, of course it is,” Mrs. Van Vliet said. “How are young women supposed to learn anything?” As she said this, she knocked her water glass to the floor, where it shattered into scores of tiny, spiky shards. “Oh, shit,” Mrs. Van Vliet said. The hair on the back of Eleanor’s neck stood up. She’d found the whole conversation exhilarating, but this last outburst was thrilling. She’d never heard anyone’s mother use a swearword, and she had believed that if one ever slipped out, a thing almost unimaginable, the woman would be filled with chagrin, falling over herself to apologize. Not this mother. Mrs. Van Vliet laughed and called to the maid to sweep it up. The next day, Eleanor went to Scribner’s and bought Women in Love. She stayed up all night reading it. When she’d finished, she told her mother she was going to go to Vassar. Years later, Eleanor would think of that dinner at the Van Vliets as her Emma-Bovary-on-the-road-to-Damascus moment. Eleanor’s first act of open rebellion was to vote for John F. Kennedy in 1960. No one in the family, not since McKinley, had voted for a Democrat. Her second was to marry Rupert Falkes, a penniless Englishman. Rupert Falkes had only one social rule, which he observed punctiliously: a gentleman is never unintentionally rude. He was equal parts charm and rudeness, and in his prime, he was rude at some point or other to almost every person he knew, and many he didn’t. Occasionally, he larded his insults with obscenities. The exceptions were Eleanor, the boys, and her father. He knew that Eleanor wouldn’t tolerate rudeness to herself or the boys. She had made it clear early in their marriage when he criticized their firstborn’s table manners. “He’s not fit to eat at table,” he said to Eleanor. The child, Harry, was sixteen months at the time. He had scant control of the spoon, but insisted on using it, carrying his porridge to his nose as often as to his mouth. When Eleanor tried to help, he pushed her hand away and shook his head. “Self,” he said. “Right,” Eleanor said. “Off to boarding school with him then.” Rupert took the warning. “I’m not used to eating with babies,” he said. His explanation passed for an apology. Eleanor never minded his rudeness to others, shrugging it off. “It’s like Tourette’s or hiccups with him,” she would say if a friend mentioned it. “Raise it with him, if you like. He might respond well.” Rupert had had the good fortune he’d always say of being an orphan. A foundling, he’d been left in the English winter of 1934, when he was no more than a month old, on the steps of St. Pancras in Chichester. He was fair and rosy, healthy, and nicely swaddled, and the priest who’d found him, the Rev. Henry Falkes, was sure his mother would have a change of heart and come fetch him. She didn’t. Rupert grew up in St. Pancras’s Home for Orphaned Boys, a childhood no more brutal than one offered in the Depression years at a Church of England prep school. Whatever the weather, the boys wore shorts. Whatever the games and season, they bathed once a week in communal tubs. Until he came to America, he didn’t know that chilblains were frostbite. Rupert had a lovely boy’s soprano voice that made him stand out from the unruly, runny-nosed, scabrous little boys he lived with. It would prove not only the saving of him but the making of him. When he was seven, Reverend Falkes made an application for him to the Prebendal School and he was accepted as a chorister. From there, he went to public school at Longleat on a scholarship, and then to Cambridge, as a scholar. Holidays, he spent with Reverend Falkes, who was proud of Rupert and always kind to him but unaffectionate in that wooden way of Englishmen sent off to boarding school before they cut their second teeth. Rupert emigrated to America in the summer of 1955, when he was twenty-one. Reverend Falkes had died without warning on Boxing Day the year before and there was nothing to keep him in England. Twice abandoned and orphaned, he had no home, no one looking out for him, no useful connections. Despite his first-class education, his prospects, if he stayed, would be limited. And he was made for America. Americans loved his accent and his Cambridge pedigree and regarded his orphaned status almost as an asset, the stamp of authenticity of the self-made man. The first time Eleanor saw him weep was when he read The Great Gatsby. “We don’t read this in England,” he said. “Witless arrogance.” Rupert never talked about his first year in America, and Eleanor was never sure how he’d got on. The story he would tell was that he met the dean of Yale Law School, Eugene Debs Rostow, on a train that first year, and talked his way into a scholarship there. Rostow would not regret the decision. Rupert made the Law Journal, clerked for Judge Friendly on the Second Circuit, and then went to work for Maynard, Tandy & Jordan, where he practiced antitrust law in the golden age of antitrust. He made a lot of money, and when he retired at sixty-five, he endowed three chairs at Yale, one in honor of Dean Rostow. Eleanor was attentive to Rupert’s needs, pushing aside all feelings of loss until they could not be ignored. She would miss him, she knew, but she couldn’t wish him longer life. She wondered what the boys were feeling. They were now men, the oldest thirty-seven, the youngest almost thirty, and they no longer confided in her. Sam, the middle son, would take it hardest, but she didn’t believe Rupert’s death would be wrenching for the others, except perhaps in the feeling of what-might-have-been-and-now-never-will. But that is loss too, she thought. Harry and Sam, the two boys living in New York, visited him at the hospital at least three times a week, usually before or after work, and Sam often stayed through dinner and read to his father, picking up where Eleanor had left off. Will, Jack, and Tom came from Los Angeles, Austin, and Chicago every few weeks. Although Eleanor had been, they would tease, an overly fond mother, she had not rejected all the lessons of her childhood, but had instilled in the boys a sense of responsibility to family and community. “We do what decency requires,” she regularly said to them. “Never less.” The boys loved Rupert--he was, after all, their father and he had always looked out for them--but he had been, for so much of their early lives, so little there, they had few childhood memories of him. They remembered their mother and grandfather. Eleanor had taught them to ride their bikes and serve a tennis ball. She had held them when they were sad and kissed their scrapes. Poppa took them to baseball games and museums. He’d let them sit on his lap at dinner. A natural Watsonian, Rupert never hugged or kissed his sons. When they were two, he patted them on the head; when they were seven, he met them with a handshake. He couldn’t help it, much as he cared for them in his buttoned‑up English way. Eleanor told them not to take it personally and, except for Tom, the youngest, they didn’t. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • Named one of NPR's Best Books of 2017"Both original and moving
  • and a whole lot of fun."
  • CAROLINE LEAVITT,
  • New York Times Book Review
  • "A must-read."
  • People
  • "Fans of Salinger's stories about Manhattan's elite will enjoy this novel about privileged siblings who grapple with the state of their inheritance and long-held secrets that emerge in the wake of their father's death."
  • InStyle
  • Six months after Rupert Falkes dies, leaving a grieving widow and five adult sons, an unknown woman sues his estate, claiming she had two sons by him.  The Falkes brothers are pitched into turmoil, at once missing their father and feeling betrayed by him.  In disconcerting contrast, their mother, Eleanor, is cool and calm, showing preternatural composure.    Eleanor and Rupert had made an admirable life together -- Eleanor with her sly wit and generosity, Rupert with his ambition and English charm -- and they were proud of their handsome, talented sons: Harry, a brash law professor; Will, a savvy Hollywood agent; Sam, an astute doctor and scientific researcher; Jack, a jazz trumpet prodigy; Tom, a public-spirited federal prosecutor. The brothers see their identity and success as inextricably tied to family loyalty – a loyalty they always believed their father shared. Struggling to reclaim their identity, the brothers find Eleanor’s sympathy toward the woman and her sons confounding. Widowhood has let her cast off the rigid propriety of her stifling upbringing, and the brothers begin to question whether they knew either of their parents at all.   A riveting portrait of a family, told with compassion, insight, and wit,
  • The Heirs
  • wrestles with the tangled nature of inheritance and legacy for one unforgettable, patrician New York family. Moving seamlessly through a constellation of rich, arresting voices,
  • The Heirs
  • is a tale out Edith Wharton for the 21st century.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(742)
★★★★
25%
(618)
★★★
15%
(371)
★★
7%
(173)
23%
(568)

Most Helpful Reviews

✓ Verified Purchase

Loved this book...

Susan Rieger's new novel, "The Heirs" tells a story, and tells it well. The story is that of the Falkes family; Rupert and Eleanor, the parents; and the sons, Harry, Will, Sam, Jack, and Tom. The story also includes friends and relatives of the family members, who come in and out of the Falkes' lives.

The book begins with the death of family patriarch Rupert Falkes at 65. Rupert was a poor-boy-made-good; he began life in an English orphanage and was adopted by an Anglican priest. Brains and intuition got him into Cambridge and the same qualities - plus an English accent and charm - helped him when he emigrated to the United States. He graduated from Yale Law School and began a fast rise in the New York City legal community. He also married Eleanor Phipps and raised five sons. All were successful at life and Rupert Falkes could consider his a life well-lived, if not too short. But the well-lived life contained some "hiccups"; heirs from the other side of the blanket made claims on Rupert's estate after his death. Eleanor handles these people as she handled everything in her life, with grace and intelligence. It's the boys who were in various states of disbelief about their father's possible "other life".

While I was reading "The Heirs", I kept comparing Rieger's writing style to that of the late, great Laurie Colwin. Also reminiscent of Colwin were the characters created by Rieger; mostly wealthy WASPS and Jews who lived quiet public and private lives. (One book by Colwin, "Shine On, Bright and Dangerous Object", seemed to be the natural literary ancestor of "The Heirs", though Colwin fans could also argue the book compares favorably to "Family Happiness")

Susan Rieger writes her story at a bit of a remove from the characters and the plot. It's a sort of flat writing - not usual in fiction - but seems to work quite well here. Her characters are so well-mannered that I can't believe the story would have been helped by more florid writing. She brings all her characters to life with nary a caricature in the bunch. I was just delighted by this book.I'll return to it again. (Her previous book, "The Divorce Papers" was also quite good.)
25 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

dull, detailed account of extreme wealth

This book reads like a novelized version of the old tv show Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous. In theory, the story is supposed to revolve around the alleged infidelity of the recently deceased patriarch of a very wealthy and privileged family. In actuality, the book is less focused on telling a story and more intent on sharing copious details of the extravagant lives of the family members and some of their equally wealthy friends. If you want to read a litany of descriptions of Ivy League educations, lavish New York apartments, and expensive weddings, then The Heirs is for you, but I certainly didn't enjoy it.

To make matters worse, all of the characters are extraordinarily shallow and self-centered. So many of them cheat on their spouses and partners that it's hard to keep track of all the infidelity. The characters also do things like stalk children, leave an infant child alone in a house for hours, encourage each other to lie to their spouses, and engage in other actions suggesting they lack a moral compass.

There's also a semi-graphic rape scene that I didn't see coming and really could have lived without.

This book could have been worse, and the author did demonstrate a good grasp of basic writing techniques, but this sort of book is not for me.
15 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

It was difficult to like ANY of the characters

Way too many characters that aren't clearly identifiable. Once the daughter in laws become involved, I almost gave up. So dry in the
beginning and then all sex in the end. Unbalanced. It was difficult to like ANY of the characters. Would not recommend! There are so many better reads out there!
12 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Throwing it out of the window

Boring!! If you like to watch paint dry, this is the book for you.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Entertaining, engaging family story

I'll be surprised if this book doesn't become a best seller, has its rights sold for a movie, or, at the very least, becomes a book club favorite. It has all the elements: rich, complicated characters; a plot that, as the author weaves back and forth in time and point of view, develops surprises until the very end; lots, and lots, of sex; a peek into the lives of the rich and well connected, if not necessarily famous, of New York City; and excellent, sometimes sly and witty writing.

The Heirs of the title are Will, Harry, Tom, Jack, and Sam, the five successful-in-their-own-way grown sons of Rupert Falkes, a British foundling who became a very wealthy self made man, and his wife, the former Eleanor Phipps, blue blooded daughter of upper class New York bankers. When Rupert dies from metastatic prostate cancer, he leaves his family very well off, but with a mystery that pops up after his two column Times obituary is published. A woman none of the Falkeses knew existed sues his estate claiming that Rupert fathered two sons with her. Vera Wolinsky writes directly to Eleanor to inform her that her sons Hugh, 24, and Iain, 23, deserve their share of Rupert's estate.

From there, we roam from point of view to point of view, learning more about Eleanor and her horrible mother but loving father, about each of the sons, including Sam, the gay scientist in love with a straight woman, about Vera and Rupert's two part relationship, and about Eleanor's lost love, Jim Cardozo, a brilliant surgeon.

It's a great read, juicy, entertaining, sometimes funny. There are times when it feels a bit too pat, but there are enough surprises to overcome most of those flaws. Great beach read!
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

A Very Worthwhile Read: Intriguing Characters and Superb Writing

I was interested in reading this book based on the publisher's synopsis and I was not disappointed. The storyline reveals the convoluted nature between love, wealth and class structures and its impact on relationships. The characters are far more complex than their public personas with family appearances stripped away in the aftermath of the patriarch's death.

Rupert Falkes was a self-made man. Born in a small town in England, he was given to an orphanage as an infant and, through the support of a priest who bestowed upon him his last name, he received a sound education. After graduating from Cambridge, he migrated to the United States and began his quest for success through hard work and a Yale law degree. Falkes was highly respected as an attorney and a family man )producing five sons with Eleanor, his wife), yet he was never able to overcome his childhood issues of abandonment and poverty. With his demise from cancer at the age of 66, long held secrets begin to emerge that shake the foundations of both the immediate and extended families.

I am not sure what was so compelling about the book, but I could not put it down. Even though the characters are well-developed, they are not particularly sympathetic; however, they are intriguing and I felt myself drawn into their lives, anticipating what would unfold next. The writing is well-paced and superb. The chapters are each titled by the name of one of the characters and explores the contribution of this person to the overall storyline. The timeline is very fluid, moving back and forth historically within each chapter, which lends an air of suspense as to how all the pieces will come together. I felt the last few chapters provided a very satisfactory, although disconcerting, ending.

The only criticism I have is that the variety of characters, woven into all the chapters over a lifetime, made it a bit challenging to keep them straight; there were times I had to backtrack a bit to remember who a particular character was and how he/she related to the plot.

Overall, I feel this is a very worthwhile read and strongly recommend it.
6 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Rarely Do I Not Finish A Book

I really tried to read and possibly enjoy this book. From the very beginning, it did not capture my interest, but I kept reading for a few more chapters. I couldn't get into the characters and finally gave up.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Last Will vs. Actual Inheritance

The Heirs explores both the resentment and reverence felt toward family members, living and dead. In the same vein as Middlemarch, relationships, especially marriages, are examined as either boons or burdens. Rupert and Eleanor are a solid couple who support and strengthen each other, but there are those whose relationship drains and weakens the participants. An examined life, here, does not always lead to improved behavior. However, an examined relationship built upon understanding, moderate compromise and shared values seems to be the winning lottery ticket. In fact, Rupert’s children receive sort of second inheritance just from having witnessed their parents’ highly functional marriage. However, even the best of relationships have hidden secrets that rarely stay hidden. Harm is done. As the title suggests, there is an actual last will and testament and quite a lot of money to be handed out, so naturally people come out of the wood works, creating havoc and undermining fundamental understandings.

The core story concerns the Falkes family patriarch, Rupert, an abandoned baby raised by an English parish clergyman who was kind enough to give the child his own surname. That bit of difference, having the last name of someone who took an interest in him and was present in his life helps Rupert form a positive sense of identity and create a full life despite little knowledge of his origins. Rupert goes on to marry well in all senses of the word. His wife is moneyed, smart, spirited yet proper, and desirable to many. His sons are each gifted in their own way, yet undeniably united as brothers—until their father’s past becomes questioned. As with most families, not everyone holds the same opinion, and that’s where other forms of inheritance come in. Did any of the boys inherit their father’s character flaw? Can they get past their disparate views, or is the final inheritance dissolution of the family?

There are side- and subplots, but each ties to Rupert and his marriage. While the novel is skillfully developed with chapters alternating focus upon various family members, acquaintances, and surprise interlopers, the back and forth-edness of the structure doesn’t really enrich the narrative—but neither does it do real harm. The Heirs leaves to its readers a fine recognition between choice, intentionality, and response. I received a free advance copy for an honest review.
3 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

Really poor. I bought the hard cover and really hated ...

Really poor. I bought the hard cover and really hated to have to toss it after two chapters. Heading should read Entire story revealed at first few pages with no chance of explaining why I should be interested in learning why this woman encouraged her husband to have a double life.
2 people found this helpful
✓ Verified Purchase

She Spoiled Me

I sank into this book with complete abandon--trusting in author Rieger's authority from the first page. She's spoiled me for other books for a bit. I believe she can inherit the mantle of Edith Wharton in writing about upper class NYC.
2 people found this helpful