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"intriguing tale"
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted July 9, 2006
Amy the new mother, Meriel the bored West-Indian
housekeeper, Naomi part of a different lifestyle couple
with Claude (though they each clean the dirty linen),
Faith the new widow, Talia the injured ballerina, and
Susan the therapist all live in the same Manhattan
apartment house. At the laundry room Read more...
"lighthearted amusing romp"
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted July 9, 2006
As she closes in on her fiftieth birthday, Angie is at the
point of no return and needs help as she is behind on
planning her daughter Jenna's wedding. She turns to her
best friends, but soon worries about them as she realizes
none are in a mental state Read more...
SummaryQuestion:
What do Amy, the new mom;
Meriel, the West-Indian housekeeper;
Claude and Naomi, the alternative couple;
Faith, the elegant widow;
and Talia, the super-skinny ballerina
have in common?
Answer:
Abso-freakin'-lutely-nothing!
Except that they all live lives of not-so-quiet desperation
on the Upper West Side of New York City. What gets them
through? Their unusual therapy sessions with supershrink
Susan Lederer, held in the depths of the laundry room. Susan
knows that all of life's problems eventually come out in the
wash, but while the washers keep breaking down, she helps
her female friends take control.
But Susan's life has become an agitated mess. Her teenage
daughter seems destined for a fast-food future; her son's
adolescence hasn't quite hit yet . . . and her perfect
husband is hiding something. Susan could use a really good
shrink.
Instead, her dirty linen exposed, she finds that it's her
friends who rally 'round her, and by the final spin, she
realizes that while it might not take a whole village, it
does sometimes take a laundry room to get rid of the nastier
wrinkles in life.
Now if only she could find the formula for getting rid of
that ring around the collar.
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