Submitted by watchungbooksellers on Wed, 03/24/2010 - 8:07am
04/29/2010 7:30 pm
04/29/2010 8:30 pm
Woodruff (Someone Else's Child) leaves not a dry eye in the
house in this gripping ode to theater and the love it can command—and
crush. Former actress turned restless suburban New Jersey mom-of-three
Georgie and her journalist husband, Peter, transplant to London for
Peter's new job. There, Georgie finds her way back to the theater and
lands a role in a small one-woman production of Shakespeare's Woman,
playing famous 18th-century British stage actress Dora Jordan. It's a
part that consumes Georgie from the start, notes Peter, who achingly
chronicles his wife's affair with her part and, eventually, with
playwright Piers. Georgie's tour de force as Dora comes from her total
recognition of the character—Two hundred years later and it's exactly
the same thing, Georgie tells Piers—and her life as Dora and as Piers's
lover begin to take precedence over her husband and children. Peter's
excruciating autopsy of his crumbling marriage is unsparing and
relentlessly punishing, but the kicker at the novel's end makes the
adultery feel like a cozy little tea party. It's brutal and lovely.