2 books offer just the right summer mix of humor and nostalgia

2 books offer just the right summer mix of humor and nostalgia

Sandwich Harper Collins hide caption

toggle caption Harper Collins

Summer reading. For me, those words suggest an unhurried expanse of time to lose myself in a good story — fiction or nonfiction. Save the dystopian novels till the fall, please; right now, I want books that glimmer like fireflies with dashes of humor and nostalgia. I’ve just read two that fit those summery specifications.

Catherine Newman’s new novel is called Sandwich, after the town on Cape Cod where her characters have rented a cottage for one precious week every summer for the past 20 years. The title also winks at the situation of our main character, Rachel, nicknamed “Rocky” who’s “halfway in age between her young adult children and her elderly parents” — all of whom crowd into that ramshackle cottage.

In the opening scene of Sandwich Rocky’s husband, Nicky, stands paralyzed, plunger in hand, before the cottage’s single, overflowing old toilet. As Rocky’s vacation week progresses, other things also slosh and overflow: secrets; messy emotions, like anger and shame; and, as Rocky tells us, her own aging body:

Menopause feels like a slow leak: thoughts leaking out of your head; flesh leaking out of your skin; fluid leaking out of your joints. You need a lube job, is how you feel. Bodywork.

Newman elegantly segues from Nora Ephron-like comic passages like that one to elegy. To return to the same place every summer, after all, is to be periodically brought up short by the passage of time. In the middle of the novel, for instance, Rocky uses another metaphor to describe her position in her family and this time her tone is infused with anticipatory grief:

Life is a seesaw, and I am standing dead center, still and balanced: living kids on one side, living parents on the other. Nicky here with me at the fulcrum. Don’t move a muscle, I think. But I will, of course. You have to.

Sandwich is my idea of the perfect summer novel: shimmering and substantive. One more aspect of Newman’s book deserves highlighting: like many other recent novels by best-selling female authors — I’m thinking of Jennifer Weiner, Ann Patchett and Megan Abbott — Newman introduces a storyline here about abortion. She writes about that contested subject — and the emotions it engenders — in a way that I’ve never encountered in fiction before.

2 books offer just the right summer mix of humor and nostalgia

When Women Ran Fifth Avenue Doubleday
hide caption

toggle caption Doubleday

As a city kid who grew up in an apartment without air-conditioning, I have happy memories of seeking relief from the heat by wandering around grand New York department stores like Bloomingdale's, Macy’s and B. Altman. Julie Satow’s new narrative history, called When Women Ran Fifth Avenue, is a treat for anyone like me who yearns to time travel back to some of those palaces of consumption at the height of their grandeur. But even more revelatory are the stories Satow excavates of the women who presided over three of the greatest and now-vanished New York department stores: Bonwit Teller, Lord & Taylor and Henri Bendel.

Geraldine Stutz rescued Bendel’s in the 1960s — as shopping moved to the suburbs -- by turning its small size into an advantage: creating exclusive boutiques within the store that attracted customers like Gloria Vanderbilt, Cherand Barbra Streisand. Some 30 years earlier, Dorothy Shaver of Lord & Taylor, who Life Magazine dubbed America’s "No. 1 Career Woman” revolutionized fashion by championing the sporty “American Look” at a time when French designers held sway.

But the stand-out figure of the trio is Hortense Odlum, a self-described “housewife” whose husband bought a near-bankrupt and “sagging” Bonwit Teller during the Great Depression and asked her to visit the store to judge it with a woman’s eye. One of her first smash successes was the introduction of a “hat department” on the main floor. In 1934, Hortense became the first woman president of an American department store.

Satow specializes in entertaining cultural histories — her previous book was a history of New York’s Plaza Hotel. Here, she intersperses descriptions of such wonders as Salvador Dali-designed window displays at Bonwit’s with accounts of the racism pervasive in these department stores.

For those readers immune to the allure of shopping or the shore, be assured that more of summer reading recommendations — especially mysteries and crime novels — are coming your way. You can also see what NPR staff and critics are recommending here.

OTHER NEWS

12 minutes ago

Red Bull unveils star-packed line-up led by Primoz Roglic ahead of Tour de France

12 minutes ago

Former champions Rybakina, Vondrousova eye Wimbledon repeats but injuries a concern

12 minutes ago

From fake rentals to theft, scammers are targeting your car

12 minutes ago

‘Biggest show I have done’: Multidisciplinary artist Brian Gothong Tan is NDP 2024 creative director

12 minutes ago

Japanese scientists make smiling robot with ‘living’ skin

12 minutes ago

Expect the unexpected as Gauff gets ready to conquer Wimbledon

12 minutes ago

Biden-Trump debate: 'Threats to democracy,' Jan. 6 could take center stage

12 minutes ago

Lucy Bronze to make Barcelona exit after trophy-laden spell in Spain

12 minutes ago

Who is Hannah Klugman? British 15-year-old aiming to qualify for Wimbledon

12 minutes ago

Carabao Cup draw LIVE: Updates and reaction as first-round ties are decided

12 minutes ago

White noise machines for infants can be dangerously loud, study says

12 minutes ago

China calls on scientists of all nations to study lunar samples, but notes obstacle with the US

12 minutes ago

A Greek police officer guarding a top judge's house is injured in a predawn gasoline bomb attack

12 minutes ago

Biden vs. Trump on climate: Will environmental policy be addressed in the debate?

12 minutes ago

At Boeing factory, airplane manufacturer touts changes since door plug blowout

13 minutes ago

Singapore Airlines Turbulence Doc Sells Around The World; Busan Fund; SkyShowtime Partners With Prime – Global Briefs

16 minutes ago

Now your flip flops are making you look old! Stylist claims flimsy footwear will make summer outfits look dated and says you should opt for on-trend chunky sandals instead

16 minutes ago

Zoe Ball credits health professionals after revealing she needed an emergency appointment - weeks after confirming the death of her mother Julia to cancer

17 minutes ago

‘Entirely appropriate’ for PM to call Assange: Penny Wong

17 minutes ago

Rashid Khan penalised for throwing bat

17 minutes ago

Portfolio committees discussed ahead of Cabinet

18 minutes ago

Beethoven was a classical and romantic composer, but his body was full of heavy metal

18 minutes ago

The Japanese coach who came to Ireland to study the rugby

18 minutes ago

Fireworks ceremonies mark Glastonbury's first night

18 minutes ago

Why Tim Burton Hated Working For Walt Disney Animation Studios

18 minutes ago

'Error in judgment' moments before elite pilot's death

18 minutes ago

House Democrats try bypassing GOP to force vote on "red flag" gun control bill

18 minutes ago

Uruguay vs. Bolivia: Kick-off time, TV channel, preview and how to watch Copa America 2024 match

18 minutes ago

Travis Kelce Made a Surprise Cameo at Taylor Swift's Eras Tour

21 minutes ago

Countertenor John Holiday isn't trying to make you love him

21 minutes ago

At the factory that builds the 737 Max, Boeing rethinks how it trains new hires

23 minutes ago

Aussie world champion who won Olympic silver pleads guilty to domestic violence charges

23 minutes ago

Video: Taylor Swift's boyfriend Travis Kelce gushes over 'superstar' Princess Charlotte's 'fire' and praises Kate Middleton and Prince William's parenting

23 minutes ago

Now police step in to investigate election bets placed by politicians as  Scotland Yard says detectives are  'taking the lead' on most serious allegations - amid claims that Tory gambled £8,000 on losing his own seat

23 minutes ago

Texas brute smashes bar patron across head with 5-foot-long tree branch, punches an employee in blindside attack

23 minutes ago

France's shock election has rattled nerves and raised debt crisis talk

23 minutes ago

Cleverly: Betting scandal distracts from important issues

24 minutes ago

Constituency Profile: Fermanagh and South Tyrone

24 minutes ago

How US sport shows are inspiring BBC pundits to make 'outrageous and controversial' statements to raise their profiles - after Harry Kane led criticism of Gary Lineker's 'frank and sweary' podcast

24 minutes ago

Rand weakens as SA waits for Ramaphosa's cabinet announcements