Cover Image: Alternate Side

Alternate Side

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Member Reviews

This was really, really entertaining. I loved the choppy sense of time, and the few interspersed memos/letters. And the ending was just...whew, perfect. I'm really looking forward to giving this to my patrons.

Thanks to the publisher and to NetGalley for the digital ARC.

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What a great little book! I thoroughly enjoyed this (although I expected that given it's Anna Quindlen). This one is all about relationships - husband/wife, parent/child, neighbors, friends, siblings, co-workers, strangers, and finally with yourself. It explores all the various relationships we have and the effects those relationships have on us throughout our lives. There's also a strong theme of "what-if" - what if this or that had happened, would lives have turned out differently? It's a question I'm guessing everyone has asked themselves more than once throughout their lives. One thing I really liked about this book was the time and effort the author took with the after story. Many times a book will spend 99% of it's story telling the before and during, but very little on what happens after, and I am left feeling cheated by the ending. This one had a hefty after section, and really wrapped up the story well. I enjoy Anna Quindlen's writing - this one tells a story without a lot of fluff and pretention. It's simple and easy while still making me think. Highly recommend it!

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By far, my favorite book of the year. I couldn't put it down and I didn't want it to end. Beatifully written with characters so real. In effect, it is a hate/love story of New Yorkers as well as a story of a marriage. The dialogue is so believable, especially the interactions with the children.

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Years ago Calvin Trillin wrote Tepper Is Not Going Out, a book he called the world's first novel about parking. In that book Tepper parks in front of Russ & Daughters and reads his paper until he gets the full time on his meter. When I saw him all those years ago, he said he wrote it to illustrate the continuing frustration that New Yorkers have with parking in their city and their methods for complying with the City's parking rules. Anna Quindlan uses the same jumping off point in her latest book, one of her best -- I'm only surprised it took almost 20 years for another book to appear centered around what those New Yorkers who insist on still owning cars have to deal with, the tricks employed to secure a place on the street. And what a street it is! A fictitious dead end on the upper West Side, fronted with Victorian townhouses and inhabited with an upscale population who meet as they walk their dogs, have a local "mayor" a boor who polices the area, a huge Christmas party thrown by seemingly the wealthiest of them all. And they have Ricky, an angel capable of fixing everything and keeping these houses running, on call 24/7. It also has a vacant lot that provides a very limited number of treasured parking spaces.
Nan and Charlie Nolan have finally scored one of these gems which thrills Charlie a lot and Nan not so much.
The plot is set in motion with Ricky's van impeding (supposedly) the exit from the lot for Jack, the most entitled of the residents. This sets in motion events that will impact everyone on the block, told from Nan's point of view. With her customary journalistic skills and powers of observation, Anna Quindlan creates characters that breathe and situations that reverberate with authenticity. I loved in particular her exchanges with her daughter which only a mother of an assertive brilliant daughter could have created. Thanks to netgalley for the advance copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

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Anna Quindlen is such a talented writer and fulfills every expectation in ALTERNATE SIDE. It is the story of true-blue New Yorker Nora Nolan and the neighborhood she lives in on the upper west side. Nora's neighborhood is close-knit and the occupants have lived in relative harmony until one of the neighbors, known for his temper, commits an ugly act that throws the neighborhood out of kilter. This malicious act coincides with Nora's husband's growing discontent in his station in life and Nora questions whether balance can be restored. Quindlen deftly portrays how where we live and those who surround us affect our sense of self. Thoroughly engaging; I hated to see it end.

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A quiet novel that grows into an absorbing read. Anna Quindlen uses a NYC residential street as a microcosm for alternate sides of life, be that black and white, husband and wife, rich and poor, parents and children. Everything in Nora's life is ticking along at an even pace with perfect balance until a violent incident upsets it all. The ripple effect is profound.

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I devoured thos latest from accomplished author Quinlen on 2 days. The character of museum director Nora Nolan is so relatable, likeable and honest. She is an independent woman, fiercely loyal to her kids and friends who doesn’t let the frustrations of city life dampen her love for her beloved NYC. The portrayal of a marriage that has run out of steam was spot on - there were so many sentences I found myself wanted to h9ghlight. - and the characters whose lives and relationships play out on the dead end block where the. Nolans live is fascinating. They are really no villains In this finely drawn story, just interesting,, complex people living their lives In the surprisingly tight knit community in the city.

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I am a huge Anna Quindlen fan, so I jumped at the chance to get an ARC of The Alternate Side. The Alternate Side does not disappoint. Quindlen offers a glimpse into the life, decisions and evolution of Nora Nolan, a woman in her late 40's who leads a seemingly charmed life, in a seemingly quaint dead-end street ion the Upper West Side, with a seemingly rewarding career. As the story unfolds, the reader realizes Nora's life is not all it appears. With her twins off to college and a traumatic event that shakes the neighborhood to the core, things begin to unravel for Nora Nolan. She realizes that her marriage suddenly and irrevocably shifts from acceptably unhappy, to miserable. One of her many poignant revelations is, "Marriages (are) like balloons: some went suddenly pop, but more often than not the air slowly leaked out until it was a sad, wrinkled little thing with no lift to it anymore." But, Nora is strong and refreshingly honest with herself and others. Female friendships, her relationships with her daughter and sister, and Manhattan itself all play central roles in Nora's evolution. I also absolutely loved the banter between Nora and the not-homeless homeless man outside her workplace.

Thank you to #netgalley and Random House Publishing for the advanced readers copy of #AlternateSide in exchange for an honest review.

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Beautifully written. I think I thought there was going to be a more dramatic event on the block than what actually happened but Quindlen’s perfect descriptions of everyday occurrences, people, and just life in general made up for it.

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This is exactly the kind of book I love. The writing is clean and story well paced, encouraging me to reflect over where the book and my own life intersect. Anna Quindlan writes for me.

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It's hard to say anything about Anna Quindlen to do her justice, but I will try.....
Alternate Side is a story of a neighborhood, and more specifically a parking lot, in Manhattan. Quindlen tells the story of the marriage of Charlie and Nora Nolan through a tragic event that occurs one morning in this lot. The story is told with a perfect combination of sadness and humor, and carries all the grace that Quindlen's writing is known for. A must read for fans of her previous work.

I received this book free from NetGalley in exchange for my honest and unbiased opinion.

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Anna Quindlen's newest book, ALTERNATE SIDE is a masterpiece of New York life, social mores, and personalities.
Charlie and Nora Nolan are living the successful middle-aged life on one of the city's few dead-end streets in a family neighborhood on the Upper West Side. Their twins, Rachel and Oliver, are at good colleges, and the married couple are drifting into middle age financially stable, but personally unfulfilled. When a neighborhood tragedy occurs it makes them both take a good look at themselves - individually and together as a couple -- and revaluate where and what they want to do with the rest of their lives.
Quindlen has painted a picture of middle-class privilege and angst so vividly in this book. The Nolan's neighbors are a mishmash of likable and totally unlikable people - just like you'd find in any neighborhood in America.. As social mores change and opportunities come and go, Nora and Charlie try to get through each day, secure in the knowledge each is right in whatever decision they make, even if it is wrong for them as a couple.
When I first started reading this book I thought the title was indicative of that New York idiosyncrasy Alternate side of the street parking. As a native New Yorker, this was a struggle any Manhattan car owner who is forced to park on the street and not in a lot, experiences. But the further I read, I realized the title was really how Nora and Charlie's marriage had devolved into separate lives with alternate thinking, ideas, and hopes for the future.
As I said, this book is a masterful portrayal of New Yorkers.
I highly recommend it. 5 stars.

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Nora Nolan, a museum director, invites us on to her block on the west side of Manhattan (where houses in the neighborhood now sell for ten million dollars) and into her townhouse where she lives with her husband, Charlie an investment banker and, occasionally, with her twin college=age children. The block seems like a village where all the residents know each other, their families and pets. A renter once even compared it to a cult. Norah's life is idyllic until gradually, it isn't. Jack, a neighbor with anger management issues, allegedly attacks Rickie, the indispensable handyman, with a golf club as a result of a parking dispute, Charlie wants to sell the house, someone keeps leaving bags of dog poop on the front steps, and more indignities which Nora compares to the plagues inflicted upon Egypt.
Anna Quindlen writes with characteristic insight and humor about privilege, marriage, family, and urban life.

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I thoroughly enjoyed this book. The main character, Nora is married and has grown twins who are in college. She lives in NYC with her husband in a bog house on a nice block where all the neighbors know each other really well. She narrates the entire book, although it is in third person, it seems like first because it is all her opinions, descriptions, thoughts, feelings and her entire life with almost every detail possible that makes the plot and drives it as well. Nora and Charlie live and work in a city they have loved. Nora guides us through all different stages & places in NYC, her life, her family as they grow, and the changes she is about to face. Once I started reading I couldn't put it down because she was such an interesting person, also someone with whom I can identify with personally. Easy to read with fabulous writing from Anna Quindlen. Gave me a new perspective on New York City and my own 25 year marriage too! Every decision that I've made has affected my life and my family's life over the years and that made me stop and think. Nora is a strong, independent modern woman, a character that I respect and admire. A fabulous book that I highly recommend! Thank you NetGalley for the privilege to read and review an ARC!!

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Alternate Side: A Novel by [Quindlen, Anna]

I find Anna Quindlen to be hit or miss; this one was a miss.

Review copy provided by publisher.

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I know this book won't be available until sometime in 2018, but I already know it will be one of my favorite books of the year. I live in Manhattan and the very term, ALTERNATE SIDE, fills me with angst and despair. Quindlen uses the parking situation as a metaphor for changing not only parking spaces, but actual lives.

Nora Nolan and her husband Charlie live in a unique cul de sac on New York's Upper Westside and the issues over a small vacant lot used for parking become the catalyst of their own move into a different life. Charlie is a dissatisfied man, looking to change himself by moving to a different climate and leaving the NYC rat race where he is not especially successful, Nora on the other hand, breathes in and gains strength from the air of Manhattan.
It is an incident which occurs in that lot which changes their lives. A neighbor has beaten the local Latino handy man with his golf club because he has blocked his exit from the lot. That golf club, and all it conveys about the man who wields it, is the turning point in the lives of all the people involved in the incident. It is the hapless Charlie who becomes a witness for the perpetrator while Nora sees the cruelty and dismissiveness of the brutal act of rage.

It brings to light all the differences that have put them on ALTERNATE SIDES of this incident and ultimately leads to the dissolution of their marriage. It is not a sad ending, but the right one for 2 people who have drifted so far apart. It even occurs at a perfect time for all of us with children, graduation and the start of their twins' own lives. So, they both move on, full of hope to new jobs and without the burden of moving their car to Alternate Sides!

This is a wonderful book, which I didn't put down. I loved Nora, her quirks and her idealism. Quindlen manages to include the archetypes of the affluent New Yorkers who live in these gentrified areas of NYC. I suspect they are my neighbors and I can picture them all. What a fabulous job Quindlen has done, this book should not be missed. I will remind all of you when it is available.

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Anna Quindlen has done it again!!

Alternate Side is a thought provoking novel that is relatable to everyone. I dove into this book the moment it hit my kindle and ended up devouring it in one day. I found the characters were realistic and I connected with them immediately which is the reason I couldn’t put my kindle down until I finished. The storyline was paced perfectly and never lagged —love that! Anna Quindlen’s novel’s always have me reflecting upon my own life after I’m finished. After Alternate Side, I thought about the domino effect some decision have had and also the difference between perception and reality— I LOVE a book that can make you look introspectively! The Alternate Side is a 5 star read that is on my 2018 favorites list!! Must read!!

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Totally relatable. I enjoyed this book so much. Kind of homey, in a New York way. Characters seemed real and honest. Lovely!

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Anna Quindlen's newest novel is a gift for women who are contemplating their lives when they have reached the forty-something years, especially those who grew up or moved to New York as young adults. Nora Nolan lives in a townhouse (a dead end street serves as an excellent metaphor) on the Upper West Side with her husband, Charlie, and their twins, Ollie and Rachel. The novel begins just as the twins are headed off to college and life begins changing for Nora.

The family is quite privileged. They own an entire townhouse, employed a nanny when the twins were young, and now that nanny, Charity, works as a housekeeper on a daily basis. Ollie attends MIT and Rachel go to Williams, elite schools where admissions are highly selective, and the cost is prohibitive for most people. Nora works as a manager for a museum of beautiful jewelry, a very satiric comment on how the wealthy see their possessions. Nora's boss, Bebe, created the gallery from her jewelry collection, acquired during marriages to a few wealthy men.

Charlie works as an investment banker, and he is the source of conflict for Nora. Charlie wants to sell their house after the kids leave for college. He'd like to move south and live on a golf course. Charlie is paranoid about not moving up the ladder at his organization; he begins to complain about New York, his job, younger men who seem to be climbing the ladder faster. In other words, nothing is ever good enough, a central theme of the book.

Charlie's issues create the ultimate "rich people's problems story." Nora begins to evolve, making the book exciting and just a bit suspenseful. She has it all, but something is missing as well. The struggle over leaving NYC is familiar, and that extends to her relationship with many folks in her life, including her husband. ALTERNATE SIDE is an excellent novel for grown-up people who know what makes up a well-lived life. It is about making difficult choices when sticking to what you have is just the most natural path to follow.

Thank you, NetGalley, Anna Quindlen, and Random House for the opportunity to read this e-ARC.

Expected publication: March 20, 2018

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Two people can share one umbrella, but can they survive the storm together?

Manhattan is the mecca for those who weave their way onto the wide and burgeoning lap of New York City. Funny how that works out. Most who possess the placcard of New Yorker are from someplace else.

Charlie and Nora Nolan have set stakes on a deadend street in this part of New York City. Most of the stately homes are from an era of long ago. Their twins, Oliver and Rachel, no longer reside with them and are attending college. But Homer? Now Homer, a furry Australian sheepdog of thirteen years, is their ticket to the outside world of neighbor upon neighbor. You can't help but engage in small talk with those who live in such close proximity while walking the little barkers several times a day.

Anna Quindlen creates a ring-side seat, front and center, into the lives of Charlie, Nora, and those recognizable neighbors, both kindly and obnoxious. Life in the Big City is filled with trials and tribulations and surviving the onslaught of a constantly changing score card. Some days you're up at bat and hit it out of the park and other days you're benched for eternity.

And it all begins with a parking space down the street. New Yorkers know that such a cue is like embracing the Holy Grail with both arms. Rare, dear readers, rare. Charlie doesn't realize that renting this spot on cracked concrete will lead to tragic circumstances.

Quindlen, as only Quindlen can, sketches a "Lord of the Flies" situation here with neighbor against neighbor and emotions taking reign. Does the loudest voice always signal immediacy of command? And whose opinion carries the most weight? And what do your lying eyes tell you?

Ah, dear readers, this is a little treasure of a read. Quindlen rounds out her storyline with humorous banter (laugh out loud), indepth backstories, and the painful observations of city life with "the haves" and "the have nots" who are aware and unaware of their social plights. Nora Nolan's daily interactions with a homeless man in front of the museum where she works is alone worth the price of admission. The mundane actions, day after day, are not so mundane after all.

I received a copy of Alternate Side through NetGalley for an honest review. My thanks to Random House and to the very talented Anna Quindlen for the opportunity.

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