Monday, December 14, 2020
ELIGIBLE by Curtis Sittenfeld
When I first began reading this book, I found it to be
frivolous and concluded that perhaps transporting Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice to 21st
century America was not such a great idea.
However, I soon changed my mind and became completely engrossed in this
guilty pleasure. The five Bennett
sisters, all unmarried, have come home to the family Tudor mansion in
Cincinnati to help out during their father’s recovery from heart surgery. Actually, only the two oldest—Jane and
Liz—have come home, because Mary, Lydia, and Kitty already live there. Jane and Liz live and work in New York, while
the other three have failed to launch.
Liz soon discovers that her family’s fortune has now been replaced by a
mountain of debt. Mrs. Bennett, whose
lack of good sense is appalling, secures an invitation to a party at which Jane
meets and eventually falls for Chip Bingley, a doctor who has just appeared on
a reality TV show in which he was expected to choose a wife. Also at the party is Chip’s friend
Fitzwilliam Darcy, a neurosurgeon. Liz
overhears Darcy making snide remarks about the women in Cincinnati, and the two
soon become verbal sparring partners and more, especially since they seem
destined to keep running into each other.
Their relationship is juicy, delicious, and sexy, and they are too busy
insulting one another to realize how much they really enjoy one another’s
company. I would love to see a movie
based on this version of a story we’ve seen time and again on film. It would be so fresh and fun.
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2 comments:
Thanks for bringing this book to my attention Patti- I loved it! An added bonus for me is that I lived in Cincinnati for a few years and knew someone who grew up on Lower Grandin Road. Lots of interesting references!
Sorry to be so late noticing your comment and posting it. Thanks, Carol!
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