This is a wonderful , don't want to put down book..
having a job at the pool, checking badges all day, allows for me to read read read... this was read in a day of checking badges and sunshine....
very good ...
having a job at the pool, checking badges all day, allows for me to read read read... this was read in a day of checking badges and sunshine....
very good ...
From back of book:
They are the cream of the Washington elite -- admired, envied secure -- until one of them dies a violent, mysterious death. Now the remaining four have come together to mourn, to questions and ultimately to launch an investigation that will change their lives forever.
They are the cream of the Washington elite -- admired, envied secure -- until one of them dies a violent, mysterious death. Now the remaining four have come together to mourn, to questions and ultimately to launch an investigation that will change their lives forever.
Five women, who are best friends, have met for lunch for years. All are in positions of power in Washington, D.C. Sara Webber is a Supreme Court nominee; Carol Lundgreen, a congresswoman; Faith Paige, presidential press secretary; Leona Maccoby, a caterer whose husband's financial power reaches to the White House; and Maggie Steadman, a well-known journalist. When Faith's unexpected death is revealed as a suicide, her friends are forced to examine their own lives and decisions. O'Brien spins a good tale. She certainly knows her political ins and outs, having served with the 1988 Dukakis presidential campaign and written the highly readable The Candidate's Wife (LJ 1/92). However, O'Brien's characters lack "the right stuff," for they don't have the luster and spice typically attached to well-known people. Ultimately, this lack of character depth keeps The Ladies' Lunch from being a first-rate read. Purchase according to demand.