George and Lizzie are a couple, meeting as college students and marrying soon after graduation, but no one would ever describe them of being soulmates. George grew up in a warm and loving family—his father an orthodontist, his mother a stay-at-home mom—while Lizzie was the only child of two famous psychologists, who viewed her more as an in-house experiment than a child to love.
After a decade of marriage, nothing has changed—George is happy; Lizzie remains...unfulfilled. But when George discovers that Lizzie has been searching for the whereabouts of an old boyfriend, Lizzie is forced to decide what love means to her, what George means to her, and whether her life with George is the one she wants.
With pitch-perfect prose and compassion and humor to spare, George and Lizzie is "a richly absorbing portrait of a perfectly imperfect marriage," (Amy Poeppel, author of Small Admissions), and "a story of forgiveness, especially for one's self" (The Washington Post).
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Creators
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Publisher
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Release date
September 5, 2017 -
Formats
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Kindle Book
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OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9781501162916
- File size: 1893 KB
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EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9781501162916
- File size: 1091 KB
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Languages
- English
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Reviews
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Publisher's Weekly
July 24, 2017
Librarian and NPR commentator Pearl has made a living recommending great books; in this debut novel about love, regret, and forgiveness she tries her hand at fiction with mixed results. Her heroine is Lizzie, the only child of two famous but emotionally distant psychologists who use Lizzie to test their theories. Against the backdrop of this loveless childhood, Lizzie embarks on the “Great Game” of sleeping with every starter on the high school football team, but her attention-seeking efforts fail to generate anything more than negative voices in her head and a deep-seated self-hatred. When later her lust-filled relationship with college classmate Jack falls apart, Lizzie worries the Great Game is to blame. In steps George, a dental student with a “marshmallow” heart who wants nothing more than to make Lizzie happy. But even after Lizzie and George say “I do,” Lizzie finds herself pining for Jack. Pearl doesn’t give readers enough time to witness the deepening of George and Lizzie’s relationship for it to be convincing, and at times the characters seem out of step with the realities of 1990s-era early adulthood. Still, the path George and Lizzie’s relationship takes toward wholeness points to truths about the way people self-sabotage, the complexity of love, and the importance of being able to let go of the past. -
Kirkus
July 1, 2017
He's a celebrity dentist and a prince of a guy; she's a damaged, brilliant young woman obsessed with someone she dated in college. Can their marriage be saved?Lizzie Bultmann, the protagonist of celebrity librarian Pearl's (Book Lust To Go, 2010, etc.) debut novel, is the daughter of a pair of famous behavioral psychologists at the University of Michigan who raised her not as a loved one but as an experimental subject. Partly because she wants them to "wake...up enough to finally see her" for the extremely unhappy person she is, and also because she somehow thinks it will be fun, she embarks on what she calls The Great Game, in which she has sex with all 23 starters of her high school football team, one per week. Originally, she and her best friend were going to each take half, but the other girl was just joking around. Lizzie grimly executes her plan, resulting in a permanent "post-game show" in her head in which voices berate her for "what a terrible person she'd been and always would be." The next time Lizzie has sex it is with Jack, a boy she falls madly in love with at college; they bond over their mutual admiration for the poetry of A.E. Housman. (Lots of fun literary references in this book, including a shoutout to Julie Hecht.) Two months later, Jack finds out about The Great Game thanks to an article her evil parents have published in Psychology Today. He disappears forthwith. Though Lizzie begins dating and ultimately marries a boy named George Goldrosen, she never stops thinking about Jack and never loves George. George knows she is profoundly depressed and doesn't really love him, though he doesn't know about either Jack or The Great Game--in any case, he's so smitten he just doesn't care. As he's busy becoming a famous dentist, Lizzie spends her days in the library, looking through phone books trying to find Jack. This doesn't seem very believable, but neither does the football team thing or the mad scientist parents or even the marriage. There's a fairy-tale quality to the narrative voice and extreme premises of this book that some will find endearing.COPYRIGHT(2017) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
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Library Journal
April 15, 2017
America's best-known librarian now offers her first novel. The slightly skewed husband and wife of the title approach marriage differently owing to their very different upbringings. George comes from a warm, boisterous family, while only-child Lizzie seemed less a loved daughter than the pet project of two psychologist parents. With an eight-city tour.
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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Library Journal
July 1, 2017
Lizzie grew up with a mother and father who were academics and had little interest in parenting their daughter. Perhaps as a result of a lack of adult guidance and influence, she engaged in self-destructive behavior as a high school senior, which she later regretted. George grew up with attentive parents and was part of a loving family in which he enthusiastically participated. When George and Lizzie meet as students at the University of Michigan, George falls for Lizzie, and Lizzie--who can't stop pining for her ex-boyfriend--halfheartedly goes along with the relationship. In the pre-Internet era, in which the novel is set, Lizzie spends an inordinate amount of time searching for her lost love in phone books wherever she could find them. This behavior essentially keeps her from being fully present with George as their relationship grows increasingly serious, and it becomes more possible that he will discover her obsession. VERDICT With eccentric characters, relationship drama, and a vivid sense of place, this Anne Tyler-esque debut novel is sure to interest and please Pearl's many fans. [See Prepub Alert, 3/27/17.]--Karen Core, Detroit P.L.
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
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