(4/18/2015)
Stephanie Clifford's novel, Everybody Rise, resonates with wit and irony as she presents the resilience of "Edith Wharton"s New York" as it clashes with newcomers who arrive in the city without the pedigree of being raised with the New Yorker on their bedside table or a familial place mark in the Blue Book, yet still wish to be important, noticed. Evelyn Beegan, the protagonist's, class besotted friends, who she seeks to cultivate for her new job with People Like Us, remain seemingly immune to their own privileges but enjoy them nonetheless, as they suggest that issues of class distinction are irrelevant, or as they would say: NBD (No Big Deal). Of course, we remain a class driven, elitist society: a truth an upwardly ambitious Evelyn tries to overcome. With her independent school education at an elite boarding school, she has a toe, or perhaps a Michael Kors shoe, in the door. As Evelyn attempts to create a façade of wealth, she quickly learns what is required to survive, much less thrive, in the city's aristocratic, social whirl. The one sane voice is Charlotte's, Evelyn's oldest friend, who represents the successful nouveau riche, residing in Brooklyn—not the Upper East Side.
If you have spent any time in that world, Clifford's book will seem hilariously familiar. Redolent smells and tastes of elegant condos, Long Island estates, and Upstate NY country retreats infuse the novel. Yet, the very title intones Stephen Sondheim's sardonic song from Company, sung by Elaine Stritch: "Here's to the Ladies Who Lunch"…and, indeed, Clifford acknowledges that provenance toward the end of the novel. The final line of the song: "Everybody Rise, Rise, Rise, Rise…Pretty Women Rise," sung as a brassy parody of a materialistic, superficial life, suggests that Evelyn's rise will not be a smooth one. Complicated by family problems, indeed burdened by her mother's ambitions, Clifford also explores the complexity of young adults crafting secure, independent identities in a city that toasts celebrity behind select and guarded gates.
The beginning is a bit slow and the ending…well, you will have to decide. But the novel is totally worth reading.