Masterly deftness, funny sentence by funny sentence...a moving and intricately braided story of two mothers. Jonathan Franzen, The Guardian
This beguiling, addictive read (People, Book of the Week) and Belletrist Book Club pick about a blue-blooded single mother raising her daughter in rarefied New York City is a carefully observed family story [that] rings true to life (The New York Times Book Review).
Laura hails from the Upper East Side of Manhattan, born into old money, drifting aimlessly into her early thirties. One weekend in 1981 she meets a man. The two sleep together. He vanishes. And Laura realizes shes pregnant.
Enter: Emma.
Unputdownable (Library Journal) and wryly observed (Vogue), Laura & Emma follows Laura as she raises Emma in New York City over the next fifteen years. With wit and compassion, Kate Greathead explores the many flaws and quirks that make us human. Lauras story hosts a cast of effervescent and original characters, including her eccentric mother, who informs her society friends and Emma herself that she was fathered by a Swedish sperm donor; her brother, whose childhood stutter reappears in the presence of their forbidding father; an exceptionally kind male pediatrician; and her overbearing best friend, whose life has followed the Park Avenue script in every way except for childbearing.
Kate Greatheads debut novel gamely takes on class conflict, single motherhood, and the discreet pretension of the 1980s Upper East Side (New York magazine) and is a layered story about mothers and daughters and identity (Entertainment Weekly). Told in vignettes whose every restrained and understated sentence has been polished to glittering brightness (Vox), Laura & Emma is an incisive comedy of manners about class divides and the burdens of being born privileged (Esquire) and a thoughtful novel of trying to find oneself despite an assigned place in the world (Publishers Weekly).
Genre: Literary Fiction
This beguiling, addictive read (People, Book of the Week) and Belletrist Book Club pick about a blue-blooded single mother raising her daughter in rarefied New York City is a carefully observed family story [that] rings true to life (The New York Times Book Review).
Laura hails from the Upper East Side of Manhattan, born into old money, drifting aimlessly into her early thirties. One weekend in 1981 she meets a man. The two sleep together. He vanishes. And Laura realizes shes pregnant.
Enter: Emma.
Unputdownable (Library Journal) and wryly observed (Vogue), Laura & Emma follows Laura as she raises Emma in New York City over the next fifteen years. With wit and compassion, Kate Greathead explores the many flaws and quirks that make us human. Lauras story hosts a cast of effervescent and original characters, including her eccentric mother, who informs her society friends and Emma herself that she was fathered by a Swedish sperm donor; her brother, whose childhood stutter reappears in the presence of their forbidding father; an exceptionally kind male pediatrician; and her overbearing best friend, whose life has followed the Park Avenue script in every way except for childbearing.
Kate Greatheads debut novel gamely takes on class conflict, single motherhood, and the discreet pretension of the 1980s Upper East Side (New York magazine) and is a layered story about mothers and daughters and identity (Entertainment Weekly). Told in vignettes whose every restrained and understated sentence has been polished to glittering brightness (Vox), Laura & Emma is an incisive comedy of manners about class divides and the burdens of being born privileged (Esquire) and a thoughtful novel of trying to find oneself despite an assigned place in the world (Publishers Weekly).
Genre: Literary Fiction
Praise for this book
"A big-hearted book, tenderly intelligent and mirthfully incisive in its exploration of family, class, and the difficulty of reconciling our own natures with the way we nurture others. In Greathead's capable hands, Laura & Emma become luminously real, a lens through which the rarefied, often contradictory world of elite New York comes charmingly alive." - Alexandra Kleeman
"Stylish and understated, with grace notes everywhere...Greathead is such a keen observer of this world of people laden by the customs of privilege...Remarkably moving." - Matthew Thomas
"Stylish and understated, with grace notes everywhere...Greathead is such a keen observer of this world of people laden by the customs of privilege...Remarkably moving." - Matthew Thomas
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