"fine relationship drama"
The five women are at the Lakeside Inn to attend the
wedding of Jennifer to Michael. Each has differing
feelings about marriage and relationships with men in
general. All feel they are in some form of a personal
crisis. The bride's Aunt Elizabeth Anderson plans to confront her
seemingly indifferent husband Phil after the ceremony as
she sees nothing positive with their quarter of a century
together especially since she assumes he loves his jogging
partner Delia. The wife of Michael's boss Suzette Burke
thinks her spouse Jim is cheating on her. Jennifer's
widowed paternal grandmother Margaret Simpson misses her
Calvin, who died almost a year ago. The groom's sister-in-
law Laura Fairbanks suffers from postpartum depression,
but her husband David, their family and her friends refuse
to see her mental troubles as their two month old daughter
Amy is perfect. Finally Ingrid Campbell suffers from
doubts about tying the knot to Jason; she fears she agreed
to his proposal as a knee jerk reaction to her best
friend's wedding. This character driven tale contains a female ensemble
effortlessly rotating chapter leads. The shifting view
point is easy to follow as each of the fivesome differs in
relation to the bride and that brings some depth to the
troubled quintet. Though readers will empathize with each
of the lead players, what initially seems like anguish
built up over varying time periods, resolves relatively
too easily though not all remain as couples by the end of
the day; expediting the issues make the quintet seem
somewhat shallow. Still this is a fine relationship drama
starring likable people in trouble. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted April 25, 2006
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