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She's the goddess of hearth and home, America's millionaire media maven of domesticity, Connecticut's most dazzling hostess, and everything in her world is perfect-except that Maggie Darling's picture-book life has suddenly gone off the rails. Amid the extravagant trappings of a Christmas Eve bash, she spies her swinish stockbroker husband slipping out of a powder room moments after his creamy young colleague. Matrimonial meltdown launches Maggie on a year of romance and misadventure, starting with an ill-fated fling with British rock star-turned-movie-actor Frederick Swann. Back home, a sniper is loose on the Merritt Parkway and a gang known as the Businessman's Lunch Posse is terrorizing patrons of Manhattan's four-star restaurants. Meanwhile, Maggie's son Hooper drops out of college and falls into the company of the sinister gangsta-rap group Chill Az Def. As calamity piles on catastrophe, can Maggie Darling brilliantly resolve the collapse of civilization as we wish we knew it?
Mr. Kunstler writes with ingratiating affection about a woman who might be endlessly happy in "the kitchen, her refuge against all the gales of life," if it weren't for life's habit of ruining her soufflés, figuratively speaking. Incidentally Mr. Kunstler whips up culinary details as readily as Maggie does. And even these touches combine authentic allure with screwball humor. Janet Maslin
More Reviews and RecommendationsJames Howard Kunstler is the author of eight novels. He has worked as a newspaper reporter and an editor for Rolling Stone, and is a frequent contributor to The New York Times Sunday Magazine. He lives in upstate New York.
More About the AuthorShe's the goddess of hearth and home, America's millionaire media maven of domesticity, Connecticut's most dazzling hostess, and everything in her world must be perfect - except that Maggie Darling's enviable life has suddenly gone off the rails. Amid the extravagant buffets of a Yuletide bash for two hundred, she spies her scoundrel investment banker husband Kenneth slipping out of a powder room behind creamy young Laura Wilkie. He is, shall we say, not forgiven. Matrimonial meltdown launches Maggie on a year of romance and misadventure, including a Venetian fling with British rock star Frederick Swann, entanglement with the gangsta rap group Chill Az Def, and a fiendish seduction by - of all people - her dashing book editor, Harold Hamish, amid the trappings of a Vermont country weekend complete with fly rods and really good chardonnay. Meanwhile, a sniper is on the loose along the suburban freeways, and the Businessmen's Lunch Posse is robbing the patrons of Manhattan's four-star restaurants, and famous friends are losing their heads on Central Park West. Can Maggie brilliantly resolve the collapse of civilization as we wish we knew it? Maggie Darling is a hilarious and perfectly refreshing modern novel of manners.
Mr. Kunstler writes with ingratiating affection about a woman who might be endlessly happy in "the kitchen, her refuge against all the gales of life," if it weren't for life's habit of ruining her soufflés, figuratively speaking. Incidentally Mr. Kunstler whips up culinary details as readily as Maggie does. And even these touches combine authentic allure with screwball humor. Janet Maslin
[Kunstler's] Maggie Darling is likable and brave. She's more than happy to make money with her skills but she also believes that if we have to eat and grow things to live, and dwell in houses, we might as well carry out these activities with as much style, joy and enthusiasm as we can. Indeed, it's not Maggie Darling who is the cause of our excessive American ways, but our excessive ways that have created a Maggie Darling. Carolyn See
Kunstler's first novel in over 10 years reflects, in deliciously funny and satiric fashion, some of his spirited nonfiction critiques of contemporary culture (The City in Mind; The Geography of Nowhere). Maggie Darling is a mid-career Martha Stewart type and aptly described media darling. But when her millionaire husband, Kenneth, snogs a pretty young thing during Maggie's celebrity-studded, career-enhancing Christmas party, "the goddess of hearth and home" faces a test of her prodigious inner resources. Maggie's picaresque romantic adventures begin with an affair in Venice with a British rock icon turned movie actor, followed by a misguided evening with a besotted photographer and a weekend in Vermont with her charming but disingenuous editor. Kunstler's details are perfect: the mouth-watering menus, the designer clothes, the name-dropping of celebrities both fictional and real. Maggie struggles to sort out a variety of betrayals and romantic disappointments while also building her multimillion-dollar catering, book and television empire. Items on her to-do list include attending to Lindy, her heartbroken, drug-addled college friend; hosting her son as he takes a break from Swarthmore and makes some dubious professional associations; and dealing with the death by sniper of her beloved gardener. While most of the secondary characters serve only as foils for Maggie and her grand dilemmas, Kunstler's great achievement is the creation of a surprisingly well-rounded and sympathetic heroine. Maggie isn't insensitive-her compulsive list making is a coping mechanism. And though Kunstler betrays his heroine as the plot devolves into farce, loose ends tie up as pretty as a Christmas bow and the novel radiantly succeeds as a contemporary comedy of manners. (Jan.) Forecast: Kunstler wrote seven novels between 1979 and 1989, but abandoned the genre for higher-profile nonfiction. Booksellers may need to reintroduce him to readers as a novelist, but his strong comeback should rack up solid sales. Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.
As if Martha Stewart didn't have problems enough. Maggie, a mega-rich, mega-chic authority on all things domestic walks, talks, and looks just like Martha. Cook up a handful of celebrities and trillionaires, lightly toasted. Throw in Kenneth Darling, Maggie's husband, philanderer with a fortune from Wall Street-no cooking needed, since he's already stewed for this ho-ho-holiest of nights, Christmas Eve. Garnish the whole with a winsome twentysomething, pat her on the bottom and turn up the heat. Oh, dear, it looks as if Kenneth is doing the patting (and more), and Maggie is steaming. Her only weapon a hot-glue gun, she orders him to pack and leave-and don't ask where your Turnbull & Asser shirts are, buster. Kenneth protests his innocence somewhat too vigorously-with the fireplace poker-and is asked to leave again, this time by the Connecticut police. So Maggie Darling and her adorable teenagers begin the new year on their own. Can a blond, beautiful multimillionairess find real love in mean old Manhattan? Frederick Swann, a singer with a nimbus of golden curls, adores Maggie, and he's only a few tables away, penning an invitation to-oh, dear, the restaurant has just been invaded by a gun-waving posse of young thugs speaking in colorful inner-city dialect. They seem to want something, and it's not a table. How surreal. How edgy. And how wonderful to have something meaningful to talk about (and the chance to add a few points about urban decay, something of a nonfiction specialty: The Geography Of Nowhere, 1993, etc.) for novelist Kunstler (An Embarrassment of Riches, 1985, etc.). Another of Maggie's admirers, Reggie Chang, photographer for her upcoming book, can't help imagining America'sfavorite housewife in a teeny-tiny apron and nothing else. Alas, she's not interested. The distraught Reggie attempts suicide. Further complications and a zany cast of thousands make Maggie's life a (sometimes happy) hell. Frenetic satire with its moments-while the mannered style grates. First printing of 35,000
Excerpted from Maggie Darling by James Howard Kunstler Copyright © 2005 by James Howard Kunstler. Excerpted by permission.
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