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The Doctor's Daughter

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In her first work of fiction in more than a decade, award-winning novelist Hilma Wolitzer brilliantly renders the intimate details of ordinary life and exposes a host of hidden truths. The Doctor’s Daughter is a haunting portrait of a woman coming to terms with her family history and the fallibility of memory.
One morning, Alice Brill awakes with a sudden awareness that something is wrong. There’s a hollowness in her chest, and a sensation of dread that she can’t identify or shake. Was it something she’s done, or forgotten to do? As she scours her mind for the source of her unease, she confronts an array of disturbing possibilities.
First, there is her marriage, a once vibrant relationship that now languishes stasis. Then there’s her idle, misdirected younger son, who always needs bailing out of some difficulty. Or perhaps Alice’s trepidation is caused by the loss of her career as an editor at a large publishing house, and the new path she’s paved for herself as a freelance book doctor. Or it might be the real doctor in her life: her father. Formerly one of New York’s top surgeons, he now rests in a nursing home, his mind gripped by dementia. And the Eden that was Alice’s childhood–the material benefits and reflected glory of being a successful doctor’s daughter, the romance of her parents’ famously perfect marriage–makes her own domestic life seem fatally flawed.
While struggling to find the root of her restlessness, Alice is buoyed by her discovery of a talented new writer, a man who works by day as a machinist in Michigan. Soon their interactions and feelings intensify, and Alice realizes that the mystery she’s been trying to solve lies not in the present, as she had assumed, but in the past–and in the secrets of a marriage that was never as perfect as it appeared.
Like the best works of Anne Tyler, Sue Miller, and Gail Godwin, The Doctor’s Daughter is private yet universal, luminous and revelatory–and marks the reemergence of a singular talent in American writing.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 31, 2005
      A keen observer of the drama inherent in family dynamics, Wolitzer (Ending
      ; Hearts
      ; etc.) returns after a 12-year hiatus with this novel about Alice Brill, a 51-year-old wife, mother, frustrated writer and "book doctor" who wakes one morning with a disturbing pressure behind her sternum. The daughter of a once renowned but now senile surgeon, Alice initially thinks her symptom might be a sign of breast cancer, which took her mother's life 30 years before. Or could it be psychological: a reaction to being downsized as senior editor at a book publisher? or a premonition that the recent squabbling with her husband, Everett, signals a point of no return in an often competitive marriage? Is it unfulfilled creative impulse? In her attempt to diagnose her symptom, Alice scours her childhood relationship with her then imperious father, her mother's poetry, Everett's motivations for harshly disciplining their youngest son, and her own unexpectedly erotic response to a talented new writer who comes to her for advice on his first novel. With her customary grace and perspicacity, Wolitzer reveals her characters' humanity as they alternately flirt with and shun the very truth they seek about themselves, until escalating complications force them to choose to grow or be left behind.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2005
      If your patrons enjoyed Meg Wolitzer's latest novels ("The Wife"; "The Position"), they've got another reason to celebrate. Meg's mother, Hilma ("Tunnel of Love"), has a new book, her first in 12 years, and like mother, like daughter. Both write smart, thought-provoking fiction with family life at its core. In "The Doctor's Daughter", Alice is a fiftysomething ex-editor whose recent job loss led to her new career as a freelance -book doctor - -someone who helps struggling authors determine whether their works-in-progress have any hope of publication. Her marriage has hit a plateau, or possibly the breaking point, and while two of her children are living their own lives away from home, the youngest is not quite stable and causing problems. On top of it all, Alice's revered physician father is suffering from Alzheimer's and living in a nursing home. When Alice awakens one morning with a feeling that something is undeniably wrong, she must wade through the muddy rivers of her life to find the cause -which turns out to be shocking. This is a smart, interesting look at the components of the midlife crisis of an accomplished woman. Let's hope the Wolitzer family continues to be prolific. Recommended for public libraries." -Beth Gibbs, Davidson, NC"

      Copyright 2005 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      November 15, 2005
      The mother of prolific author Meg Wolitzer returns with her first novel in 12 years, which focuses on the simmering emotions of middle-aged "book doctor" Alice Brill. Her father, once a brilliant surgeon, is suffering from Alzheimer's disease, and her youngest child may be a drug addict; but there is something else gnawing at Alice, a deeper worry that seems to be lodged in her chest and arouses a sense of dread. Nagged into seeing a psychiatrist by her blunt best friend, Alice begins to recover a memory from childhood that will cause her to reevaluate her parents' seemingly idyllic marriage. Meanwhile, her long-term marriage to Ev is suddenly rent by vicious disagreements about how to handle their son, and Alice finds herself physically attracted to a promising young author whose book she is editing. An astute observer of domestic travails, Wolitzer gives even the smallest events seismic significance, drawing a straight line, for instance, between a missing paperweight and the implosion of Alice's marriage. Alternately claustrophobic and insightful, this long-awaited novel will appeal to fans of Sue Miller. (Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2005, American Library Association.)

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