Book Review ~ The Physics of Relationships
2 out of 5 stars ~~ Book Review
Even though this narration was supposed to be from the Mom, the author’s masculine voice frequently leaked through. (Chas Halpern is a male). I can’t quite put my finger on the whys or hows but there is a definite masculinity to her/his ‘dry’, analytical tone.
The narrator is the Mom figure in the story. Unfortunately, she is just that. A talking head. Her deeper feelings aren’t explored. The narrator talks at the reader with conclusions rather than a true exploration. Is Chas guilty of ‘man-splaining’? And to this day, I only know her nickname.
Early on the family unit fell into being a clique. Two husbands, one divorce, 1 male child, 1 female child, 1 best friend.
Speaking of the BFF. Amy moves in with Mom for awhile. She also is having troubles in her marriage. They end up sharing the same bedroom and bed and eventually Amy makes tentative sexual ovatures to her good friend. (This is an 8 on the ‘ick’ scale.) First of all, middle-aged BFFs would not share a bed. Except at a hotel, on holiday, and there was only one room/1 bed available and they were desperate for lodging.
Why do most men think that if two women are very close friends, they must have lesbian tenacies just under the surface of that friendship?
This might have been a better book if the author had written in his own voice (as narrator) and told the story from the three men’s point of view. Greg, Lawrence, and Phil.
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