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I'm So Happy for You: A novel about best friends
 
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I'm So Happy for You: A novel about best friends [Paperback]

Lucinda Rosenfeld

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Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Back Bay Books; Reprint edition (July 29 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0316044504
  • ISBN-13: 978-0316044509
  • Product Dimensions: 13.7 x 1.9 x 21 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 259 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #328,122 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

"Rosenfeld delves into the thornier side of female friendship in this hip take on modern womanhood. Wendy and Daphne have been best friends forever, but their relationship...comes to a breaking point when Daphne suddenly pulls herself together, stops fooling around with a married man and finds a new love interest who happens to be handsome, rich and obnoxious.... In the course of a few twists, misunderstandings and revealed secrets, Wendy questions whether the source of her inferiority complex is Daphne or herself. The two friends are by turns frustrating and sympathetic, while Rosenfeld takes a dark, hilarious and painfully accurate view of the less-than-pure reasons why women stay friends." (Publishers Weekly )

"While the actions of nearly every character in the book are morally questionable, their emotions are real and often funny.... Rosenfeld demonstrates Wendy's dysfunctional relationships with her friends and family, and addresses the ugliness of envy with both humor and honesty." (Booklist )

"Capturing the surprisingly competitive world of Brooklyn brownstones and Bugaboo strollers, Lucinda Rosenfeld's I'm So Happy for You takes the comic measure of the unlikely friendship between two women." (Vogue, "Summer's Best Beach Reads" )

"[A] darkly funny story of what happens when friends become frenemies." (Redbook )

"I'm So Happy for You is an amusing and chilling look at the less frequently explored one-upmanship of some female friendships. And while Wendy's psychotic behavior pushes people away, Rosenfeld will only draw fans closer with this masterful cautionary tale." (BookPage )

"If you've ever gritted your teeth and offered a phony smile to that one friend who always seems to get everything she wants, Rosenfeld's frenemies tale will ring true...a witty, scathing novel that's a breeze to read." (Entertainment Weekly )

"It's a rare page-turner: No one is murdered and no time bombs tick--just a friendship going to seed in the moneyed coliseum of New York City yuppiedom... The feat of Rosenfeld's quick-footed, juicy book is her fine shadings of two complicated but sympathetic figures, alone and in comparison. Neither woman falls into the stereotype of slit-eyed hellcat. Daphne might be self-involved, but even judgmental Wendy will grant that she never says a bad word about anyone... this novel's charms lie in its resolute kindness. The denouement isn't fierce but funny and wistful. Rosenfeld seems to want only the best for Daphne and Wendy: a witty, passionate life, examined just enough to decide on the next object of desire." (Los Angeles Times )

"The book's confectionery veneer belies a heart of poison, as Rosenfeld tartly dispels the cherished chick-lit notion that female friendship conquers all. Equally ruthless is her sendup of overachieving New York women in feral pursuit of have-it-all motherhood without having first ascertained if they even like children." (The New Yorker )

[A] funny tale of girlfriends gone wrong.... Lucinda Rosenfeld's I'm So Happy For You is a novel about female friendship, but it's not one of those sensitive, redeeming jobs. Rosenfeld has written a satire about the dark side, about the envy, the backbiting, the bitchiness. It's nasty, it's funny, and it has a certain undeniable authenticity.... I'm So Happy For You is darkly humorous, with excellent dialogue and sharp observations about contemporary culture." (The Boston Globe )

"Despite the enormous popularity of an HBO and an entire literary genre ostensibly devoted to them, female friendships remain strangely underexplored, unlike the search for true love (I'm talking about you, Jane Austen), for which they are regularly thrown aside. Lucinda Rosenfeld stays focused in her new novel, I'm So Happy for You, and it pays off handsomely. The book explores a particularly rich relationship vein-the love of an Everywoman for her more beautiful, more glamorous pal.... Rosenfeld goes beyond the obvious issues of envy and the perils of vicariousness to examine a fascinating byproduct of female empathy.... Small resentments collect until one day, perhaps because of a trivial crime, they explode in a Wagnerian burst of emotion.... [A] thoroughly enjoyable and somewhat rare specimen of chick lit that stays focused on the chicks." (New York Times Book Review )

Product Description

What if your best friend, whom you've always counted on to flounder in life and love (making your own modest accomplishments look not so bad), suddenly starts to surpass you in every way?

Wendy's best friend, Daphne, has always been dependably prone to catastrophe. And Wendy has always been there to help. If Daphne veers from suicidal to madly in love, Wendy offers encouragement. But when Daphne is suddenly engaged, pregnant, and decorating a fabulous town house in no time at all, Wendy is...not so happy for her. Caught between wanting to be the best friend she prides herself on being and crippling jealousy of flighty Daphne, Wendy takes things to the extreme, waging a full-scale attack on her best friend-all the while wearing her best, I'm-so-happy-for-you smile-and ends up in way over her head.

Rosenfeld has a knack for exposing the not-always-pretty side of being best friends--in writing that is glittering and diamond-sharp. I'M SO HAPPY FOR YOU is a smart, darkly humorous, and uncannily dead-on novel about female friendship.

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Amazon.com: 2.9 out of 5 stars (33 customer reviews)

27 of 30 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars with friends like these... I'd move, change my name, and only make friends with men!, Aug 21 2009
By R. Presner - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: I'm So Happy for You: A novel about best friends (Paperback)
The story revolves around the relationship (I hesitate to use the word 'friendship' out of respect for the term) between two women and their crew. Immediately, you're plunged into a circle of women and their chronic pettiness. The main character, Wendy, is possibly the most insincere, insecure heroine imaginable. She's passive-aggression personified. (Who throws a baby shower for a woman, then insults her guest of honor by writing something vile on the gift???) I think occasional stabs of envy are normal, but Wendy is off the reservation. Daphne is not much better. After fifteen years of using her friend as an emotional crutch, her idea of getting her life together is to "fall in love" with a man that is handsome and wealthy. He's a complete ass, but that fact is largely ignored after his purchase of a large Brooklyn brownstone. Daphne, once a ditz with a penchant for married men, now becomes the woman Wendy desperately envies. Every thought, spoken word, and email these women generate seem premeditated to inflict the most damage on their friends. They spend the duration of the book hating each other, and it's sad to watch.

But it's not just the story that grated at me. It was the book's insinuation that all female friendships are like this. According to "Happy For You," women are incapable of liking each other's company without constantly eying your companion's jewelry, home, or husband. Competition, not solidarity, is the real glue that binds females together. If this is what the author really thinks or has experienced, she has my deepest sympathy.

I thought this would be a slightly more cerebral version of "Something Borrowed" and "Something Blue" by Emily Giffin, but was wildly disappointed. Giffin's characters had redeemable qualities; Rosenfeld's do not. While we may see (small) pieces of ourselves in Rosenfeld's women, they are impossible to like. The resentment these women quietly (and then not so quietly) harbor for each other became a character itself. And, sadly, it's the most consistent one.

10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars I'm So Unhappy for Me, Nov 19 2009
By Tracy Morales - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: I'm So Happy for You: A novel about best friends (Paperback)
Wow. Where do I even begin? I suppose my biggest question for the author is how did she get this novel published? I know that's very Wendy/Daphne of me to ask so here's hoping she won't be too offended by the question. Neither Wendy nor Daphne endeared themselves to this reader. These female characters were just plain pathetic.

The bag of flour at the baby shower was over-the-top ridiculous and unbelievable as was Wendy's OBGYN suggesting Wendy buy some pretty underwear in order to solve her infertility problems. The sound of Daphne's voice was like nails on a chalkboard. Wendy lies, steals, is selfish, jealous, highly insecure, a slacker at work and seems ill-suited to work for a magazine such as Barricade. The expedited train wreck ending was only good in that it ended the novel. Sure wish our book group had selected that novel by Gore Vidal instead.


8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
1.0 out of 5 stars The Worst Book I have Ever Read, Nov 18 2009
By S. Barnes - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: I'm So Happy for You: A novel about best friends (Paperback)
Hands down, the worst book ever. Only the comatose father-in-law manages not too offend. The characters are poorly written and loathsome in every way. Not only do I not know any women like this (thankfully), but I've never even read about such a narrow minded, narcissistic crew. If you love the Real Housewives shows, this book is for you.Its plot, people and trajectory are almost as witty and introspective as what you'll find there. I am forced to give this book 1 star because amazon won't accept zero. After reading this book, I'd like a refund on my time.
 Go to Amazon.com to see all 33 reviews  2.9 out of 5 stars 

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