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The Best Place to Be: A Novel in Stories
by Lesley Dormen

Published: 2007-04-03
Hardcover : 192 pages
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'I looked out the window and was filled with contentment. I was on a train. There was no landscape, ugly or beautiful, to demand my attention . . . None of the passengers within my view were badly dressed. I had the right book with me . . . I was happily married but alone, nothing in the ...
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Introduction

'I looked out the window and was filled with contentment. I was on a train. There was no landscape, ugly or beautiful, to demand my attention . . . None of the passengers within my view were badly dressed. I had the right book with me . . . I was happily married but alone, nothing in the immediate past to regret, nothing in the immediate future to fear. In between -- the best place to be.'

At fifty, Grace Hanford has lived long enough to be a daughter, a stepdaughter, a girlfriend, a sister, a sister-in-law, a wife, a stepmother, and an orphan. She has fallen in and out of love -- with troublesome men, with her glamorous mother, with her wild best friend, and with New York City -- more times than she can count. Still, Grace is more comic than melancholic, and a gifted confessor. She lives life as if every day is a movie in which her role is yet to be determined -- and her audience loves her for it.

In The Best Place to Be, we follow Grace from her fatherless childhood through her years at an all-girls college to adulthood in the city and her many dating escapades (and escapes) as an urban sophisticate. Wherever she may be, Grace tries to find her place in the world with humor and the blunt surprise of truth. And always, in the background, there is Grace's mother, brother, and the man she could or might or will call husband, out of reach -- until she reaches.

In the tradition of Melissa Bank's The Girls' Guide to Hunting and Fishing, The Best Place to Be is at once funny, moving, and deeply provocative, a love letter to the self-determined woman that shimmers with hilarious insight and graceful wit.

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Excerpt

The Old Economy Husband

It was that summer, the summer we were fifty and the little Cuban boy went home to no mother, not the first West Nile virus summer but the second, the Hillary and Survivor summer, you know that summer, the summer the women were manhandled in the park and the kids lined up for Harry Potter, the summer we were fifty, all of us, fifty and holding, the ones a little older and the ones a little younger, fifty and holding, like thirty and holding only fifty, and it was summer and the ones who were rich were and the ones who weren't weren't but we were all fifty, every one of us, and holding. ... view entire excerpt...

Discussion Questions

From Author Lesley Dormen:

1.These linked stories are all narrated by Grace Hanford at key moments in her life, from 18-50. They begin in the present, circle back to her childhood and young womanhood, then loop back to the present day. How does this circular structure affect your feelings about Grace?

2.Is Grace Hanford a reliable narrator? Some of the time? All of the time?

3.What is Grace Hanford seeking in her life? What does she want? Does she find it?

Notes From the Author to the Bookclub

A Note from Lesley Dormen for BookMovement Members:

Good friends tell each other the stories of their lives—mothers and men, siblings and shopping sprees, triumphs as well as flops--all the time. Could we survive without that telling? It seems to me that, as we grow older, how we feel about our lives, and therefore how we tell our stories, changes. I think of my own life as if it were unfolding on a stage, with me as the audience. Except, as time goes by, I’m in a different seat in the theater. As my seat changes, so does the angle at which my life.

That’s how I wanted my narrator, Grace Hanford, to tell her story. I wanted to create a character who talked to the reader as if she were talking to a good friend--with the same truth-telling, humor and hurt, the same self-doubt and self-justification, sharing the small moments of wisdom as well as the crazy mistakes. And I wanted Grace to tell her story at different ages, from different seats in her own psychic theater.

I found Grace when I found her anger. That was the story “I Asked My Mother,” the first story I wrote. Here was Grace at 30--single, sad, despairing of ever getting her life right. I saw how her anger masked a world of hurt. I felt the force of her fury and her pain in the comical, urgent way she confided in the reader. As a writer, I wanted to find out where Grace’s complicated feelings came from and where they might take her. I felt tenderness toward both her anger and her pain. She also made me laugh. I began to see Grace as a woman on a quest—for nothing less than her own life. Whenever we see Grace--at 18 or 30 or 50—she’s struggling to find that balance between the hurts of the past and the unknown future. For Grace, that balance is the best place to be.

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