- Joined
- Dec 19, 2022
She's just as vile, smug and obnoxious as Sideshow. And is a worse human being than he is in some respects. He doesn't try to hide his raw ambition and awfulness behind a fake Aw shucks humility the way she does.She's a terrible woman and I wish people would stop going "awww pooner" on her.
It goes well with her fluffy Ziggy Stardust mullet look though, ya gotta admit. And those butchy pooner pants with lots of zippered pockets. (Pooner fashion heaven.)That's a beautiful sweater right there
I tried image searching on that sweater the last time she wore it, to see if it was one of those outrageously expensive designer eyesores that Sideshow likes to status signal with. But no luck. It's just another hideous sweater that someone pitched into the thrift stream for someone like her to find and wear "ironically".
So her new book is completed and hits the shelves in June? Oh boy. Already up on Amazon! (Which I can't archive for some odd reason.)
Jeebus. Sounds "unforgettable", alright.From the author of the national bestseller Women’s Hotel, the irresistible and wildly entertaining story of one woman contending with age and friendship—a narrative that reads like an homage to Nora Ephron’s Heartburn.
Sixtysomething, twice-divorced Barbara is at a crossroads. In the midst of her emotional uncertainty, she looks back on the dissolution of the nine best friendships of her life, in hopes of figuring out how to optimize finding her tenth, and hopefully last, best friend. Barbara is acerbic, opinionated, and wrong about many things, but she also doesn't shy away when she's at fault. The turning point of her predicament comes from Barbara’s choice, in friends, between (too-young) Caitlyn and the (unsuitable) Other Barbara. Will she repeat the exciting mistakes of the past, or will she try a new kind of mistake for a change? She feels like an out-of-season Scrooge who is unexpectedly, and all at once, surprised and entirely transformed by the possibility of joy.
For readers who loved Bobby Finger's The Old Place and Elif Batuman's Either/Or, Meeting New People will feel like a long-lost companion—Lavery at the height of his storytelling powers. It is an unforgettable novel from one of our most inventive and brilliant writers.
The twee cover is 'A Late Riser's Miserable Breakfast.' By Carl Larsson painted in 1897. Apparently his niche was depicting upper middle class Victorian life, using his wife and child Brita for models.