Rise and Shine: A Novel
by Anna Quindlen
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Read in October, 2006
Sad Plunge into Mediocrity
I have a very strong belief that if this were a first novel by an unknown author, it would have never seen print. The story is all premise, and the promise of a novel about sisters-- one a celebrity morning talk show host the other an obscure social worker--weathering an enormous crisis, doesn't comes to fruition. This so-called crisis (at least the situation that prevails through most of the book), while titillating and tabloid, is ultimately pitiful. And...more
I have a very strong belief that if this were a first novel by an unknown author, it would have never seen print. The story is all premise, and the promise of a novel about sisters-- one a celebrity morning talk show host the other an obscure social worker--weathering an enormous crisis, doesn't comes to fruition. This so-called crisis (at least the situation that prevails through most of the book), while titillating and tabloid, is ultimately pitiful. And...more
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bookshelves:
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books-i-did-not-care-for,
misc--genres
Read in October, 2007
I think if I had read the book instead of listening to the audio version I might have given this 3 stars instead of 2. I don't know though, that's a big maybe. I didn't love the narrator - she would try to do these different voices but they all just sounded the same or really stupid. But even with not loving the narrator, I'm not sure I would have liked this book much.
I don't mind little flashbacks in the beginning or middle of a book, but by the end I just want you to get on with the sto...more
I don't mind little flashbacks in the beginning or middle of a book, but by the end I just want you to get on with the sto...more
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Read in August, 2007
Was pleasantly surprised with this book--it was not as melodramatic as I expected and was a lot more, for lack of a better word, gritty. The story essentially revolves around two sisters and their relationship with each other and the dichotomies in their personalities. One sister, Meghan, is an morning talk show host who (I think) is meant to resemble Katie Couric. She has a SNAFU on air--which the author reveals to be symptomatic of larger personal issues. The other sister works as a Social...more
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Read in March, 2008
I listened to this on tape and found myself sitting outside Nugget Grocery just to hear what would happen next. Anna Quindlen is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist and also writes excellent fiction that was excellently read. Rise and Shine is the story of two sisters, Meghan who is a national figure who hosts a morning TV show and her sister, Bridget, who is a social worker in the projects. Both lost their parents when Meghan was 8 and Briget was 4 and their relationship is greatly influence...more
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Read in September, 2007
Anna Quindlen writes this novel more as if she has a point to make than a story to tell. She manages to stretch the significance of a Janet-Jackson-Superbowl-esque incident far beyond its viability, all the while bashing us over the head with the ideas that our collective morality is purely for show, that rich people spend way too much time and money on dumb crap and that Manhattan society is... wait for it... mostly frivolous.
I'm not sure why she thinks she has anything new to contribute to...more
I'm not sure why she thinks she has anything new to contribute to...more
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Read in January, 2008
I love Anna Quindlen's commentary -- in fact, at one point, I considered her a bit of a hero. I'd always heard about her fiction, and my mom gave me Rise and Shine with the caveat that it wasn't her best. I did enjoy this story of the professional and personal lives of two very different sisters in present-day New York City. The city is almost a character in the story, and AQ does have a wonderful way with words as she transports you there. The story dives into the sisters' relationship (par...more
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Read in January, 2008
recommends it for:
fans of Anna Quindlen
I was first turned on to Anna Quindlen when I subscribed to Newsweek and she wrote her column "The Last Word" (which I think she still does. I found that I not only love her nonfiction opinion essays, but I also love her fiction.
Rise and Shine is a great book about living in New York, happiness, illusions, choices we make, family relationships, and disappointment. For all of the characters in the book, life turns out differently than they expected, and they have to figure out how...more
Rise and Shine is a great book about living in New York, happiness, illusions, choices we make, family relationships, and disappointment. For all of the characters in the book, life turns out differently than they expected, and they have to figure out how...more
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Read in March, 2008
I did enjoy a lot about the book, but two things irritated me. One was the author's wierd obsession with all things opulent, and the other was her continual holier-than-thou attitude about New York City. I had to wonder: was she scoffing at the lavish lifestyles as the main character did, or was this not a secret envy of those who can and do live this way? And secondly I wondered: Are all of us dummies who don't live in the Big Apple delegated to second rate comparitively?
Other than those t...more
Other than those t...more
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I had mixed feelings. The book seemed kind of lightweight for the most part, not exactly what I would expect from Anna Quindlen. Then, when she tried to get deep, I found it a little forced and contrived. The asides about New York got old; they were distracting and slowed down the plot unnecessarily. It's as if the city itself was a character, but one who didn't do much, just got a lot of description. I also felt that the liberal agenda detracted somewhat, and that some of her descriptions ...more
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Read in March, 2008
This is quite possibly one of the worst books I've read recently. I enjoyed Black & Blue back when it was an Oprah book but this is just . . . ugh. It doesn't have characters, it has cliché after cliché. Hard career woman, perfect teen, sassy wise black women, bleeding heart social workers, crusty old cops . . . the list goes on and none of them are particularly likeable or interesting. And the "incident" that sets everything into motion was laughable.
By the end I didn't ...more
By the end I didn't ...more
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Read in November, 2007
my stepmother who gives me great books gave this to me mainly because it is all about living in new york. and even though i didn't have high standards when i started it and it has never quite exceeded even those standards, i am flying through it. it circles around a drama in the plot that given the comparisons of hardships and lifestlyes throughout the book, comes off as trivial as some of the societal issues it is trying to call out for being trivial. while there are tensions spinning off of th...more
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Read in May, 2008
not a great book. i didn't get the story line. and the way the narrator felt/talked about her nephew really made me feel dirty. way more than parental feelings going on there. and she spent the entire novel talking down about how rich, entitled new yorkers act, but the whole time she was doing the same thing. definitely not one i would recommend to anyone. only would tell ppl who think new york is the best thing since sliced bread to read this. and i have no feelings about new york, since...more
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Read in September, 2007
recommends it for:
those on vacation; needing witty fluff
i used to be a book snob. used to think that i could only read the critically acclaimed or what my professors recommended or what they were actually reading. but like many things i used to do that weren't good for me, i have given that up. i recently procured the ability to read fluff and love it. this book is a little fluffy and i love it. the quirky observations about New Yorkers and social work as a profession are enjoyable plus the family dynamics and the realness of conversations herein are...more
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Read in February, 2008
Great book about 2 sisters and their lives. One sister, Meghan, is a famous morning talk show host who lives the so-called perfect upscale life in New York City. The other sister, Bridget, is a social worker for single mothers in the slums of New York City. There lives change when unexpected live changing events happen that affect all of the characters. This book covers themes such as the bond between sisters, upper class vs. lower class, and true success.
My favorite quote:
"The pas...more
My favorite quote:
"The pas...more
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Has a copy to sell/swap
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Read in March, 2008
This is excellent smart chick lit you can read in 2 days. Perfect airplane or rainy day book about two smart and totally different sisters. One of them is host of the show Rise and Shine, which is like the Today Show, so she makes $10 million a year. THe other sister is a social worker. They actually like each other, and the author makes you believe this could happen. The secondary characters, the 67-year-old Jewish cop boyfriend and the adorable nephew Leo, in particular, are well-wrought and b...more
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Read in August, 2007
I love anything Anna Quindlen writes, this book is no exception. It did not resonate as much as Object Lessons and One True Thing but worth the read. I like Quindlen's examination of relationships, especially at a life crisis. This book is the relationship between two sisters -- one famous (TV morning news star--based on Katie Couric???) and the other sister a regular working stiff.
The story is set in Manhattan. Enjoyed reading it just to remember favorite spots in Manhattan!
If you lik...more
The story is set in Manhattan. Enjoyed reading it just to remember favorite spots in Manhattan!
If you lik...more
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Read in April, 2008
I heard Anna Quindlen speak at an author series at Denver University. She was an incredible speaker-full of hope (even for the survival of the newspaper) though she is a journalist. I enjoyed this novel-it is about characters I am not usually interested in, but her writing pulled me through and I became intrigued by them. She has one character that is the best human being a novel has created in a long time. I am sorry, she felt compelled to disable him. why can we not, even in our imaginat...more
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Read in September, 2007
I usually like Anna Quindlen's work, but it took everything I had not to abandon this book in the middle. I kept thinking it would get better. It didn't. The story is about two sisters, one rich and famous and the other a social worker who seems to have a hard time figuring out her life. Maybe it felt episodic because I was listening to it on CD, but I just couldn't find the rhythm of the story. And I felt like the author was trying too hard to get me to like the characters. Oh, well. Mayb...more
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Read in December, 2007
Great read. Someone gave this book to me for Christmas and I started it yesterday and finished today. This is a story of two sisters and their very different but parallel lives. The story is fast paced and written with a great sense of humor. It is a roller coaster of emotions that occur in everyone's life. Maybe the circumstances are slightly different but the effects can be the same. This is reflected in this story even between the most varied groups of people, rich, or poor, famous, or ...more
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Read in April, 2008
recommended to Heather by:
ingridrecommends it for: anyone
i read this at ingrid's insistence last summer. without giving too much away, i marveled at quindlen's complex characters but did a fair amount of eye-rolling at the (overly, in my opinion) dramatic plot point near the end of the novel.
i'm currently listening to the book on CD. it's interesting how the tone of the narrator's voice sways my opinion about how the characters sound and feel. the narrator makes brigett's tone sound much more cynical than when i was responsible for her voice in my...more
i'm currently listening to the book on CD. it's interesting how the tone of the narrator's voice sways my opinion about how the characters sound and feel. the narrator makes brigett's tone sound much more cynical than when i was responsible for her voice in my...more
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book data (includes all editions)
avg rating (all editions): 3.18 (1185 ratings) avg rating (this edition): 3.20 (1098 ratings) number of reviews: 225popular shelves
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quote
"The rituals surrounding vacations among Manhattan's wealthiest and best-connected citizens are strange and specific. By vacations I don't mean country houses, which are part of the regular ebb and flow of life and which are frequently subjects for complaint - The kids never want to go! The caretaker missed the roof leak! The pipes froze! - as though having a six-thousand-square-foot, cedar-shingled cottage on five acres overlooking the ocean is nothing more or less than a constant test of character."
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