The dark secrets, infidelities, and everyday struggles of five couples residing on New York's Riverside Drive are vividly portrayed, along with the irreverent yet loyal cleaning woman who brings them together
Laura Van Wormer grew up in Darien, Connecticut, graduated from the S.I. Newhouse School of Public Communications at Syracuse University, and has spent most of her adult life working in publishing. She is the author of eleven previous novels. The Kill Fee is the fifth in the Sally Harrington series, although some of the characters - most notably the group at DBS News - are in her earlier novels Riverside Drive, West End, Any Given Moment and Talk.
Laura divides her time between Manhattan and Meriden, Connecticut.
Couldn’t finish; for me that is very rare. And I usually love older books set in the 70s, 80s,…but the characters in this book weren’t very likable nor memorable- I found them rather two-dimensional and bland. Almost like caricatures. Also, the dialogue was that haphazard slapdash offhand style that I guess is meant to seem “real,” but just fails somehow. The whole thing felt contrived and didn’t resonate with me at all. I see that a lot of people enjoyed it- good for them. It just wasn’t meant for me. *Editing to add that it USED to be a rare thing if I couldn’t finish a book. Since then, I’ve stumbled across several that I either couldn’t finish at all or that I had to put down for a bit. I think I’m losing patience as I get older.
It took a minute for me to get into this story because there were so many characters to keep up with; once I figured out who everyone was, I actually liked the novel up to a point. Towards the end, it just got a little trite and ridiculous for me.