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320 pages, Hardcover
First published January 1, 2005
In their early twenties, her crowd’s who’s-sleeping-with-whom? game had been preoccupying: one-night stands, affairs, betrayals confessed over vodkas on ice.
What is childhood, except things intruding that you aren’t prepared for: facts, like unexpected guests, suddenly standing right in front of you.
“A car makes you think about the future all the time, doesn’t it?” she says. “You have to do all that imagining: now you’ll get out of the garage and into your lane and now you’ll deal with all the traffic, and then one time, remember, just as you got to the driveway a man and a woman stood smack in the center, arguing, and they wouldn’t move so you could pull in.”
“My life is a delight,” I say.
No one can resist comparing Beattie's grown baby boomers with their younger selves__the characters who appeared in her early short story collections. Those who were once young and aimless still lack direction__only in Follies, they're much older. This time, the author has given them a past, which is refreshing, especially as they contemplate typical middle-age concerns (parents in nursing homes, children in trouble, failed relationships, etc.). Beattie's careful language and dark wit is, as always, impressive and much appreciated. Overall, the shorter pieces received mixed reviews, although one story, "Apology for a Journey Not Taken," was universally panned.
This is an excerpt from a review published in Bookmarks magazine.