I can always tell when I enjoy a book because I choose to finish it in the early morning. It's my best reading time, before anyone else gets up, before any responsibilities may kick in, usually before sunrise. So it was with The Nest by Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney. The novel
…more starts out catching your immediate interest when a unhappily married man, Leo Plumb, escapes his cousin's wedding reception to lure one of the waitresses to his car. "She moved through the crowd with a lambent glow—partly because the setting sun was bathing the eastern end of Long Island an indecent pink, partly because of the truly excellent cocaine wreaking havoc with Leo’s synapses. The bubbles rising and falling on Matilda’s tray felt like an ecstatic summons, an invitation meant just for him." His indiscretion has tragic consequences that affects the releasing of the family Nest, money bequeathed from their father to be doled out when the youngest of the four siblings turns 40. And so begins the unraveling of the plot as we are provided alternating chapters of the Plumb family and how each one had expected to use that money, how each one's plan is now ruined by Leo.
I enjoyed the structure of the novel and the character development. Besides the smart, usually high, but always charming oldest child, Leo, there is Jack, his gay brother who deals in antiques and is trying to hide from his loving partner, Walker, that he has taken out a loan on the house against the hope of the Nest. Beatrice, Leo's sister, works for an online literary magazine and has stalled as a writer of promise. Her initial well received stories were all thinly described portraits of Leo. The youngest, Melody, who turns 40 soon, is struggling to keep her twin daughters in good schools, and SAT tutors as college looms with the next year. Again the Nest was her solution for college tuition. There are several side characters as well, including Stephanie, Leo's possible love interest and savior, and her Brooklyn neighbor whose 9/11 secret becomes a subplot.
I enjoyed seeing the development of the characters as they struggle through their anger. The build up to the final 40th birthday diner was well developed and the resolution satisfying. I would recommend this as an enjoyable portrait and a timely warning for the children of the baby boomers. (less)