Schmidt Delivered (Paperback)
| Author: Louis Begley |
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Product Details:
Format: Paperback
Publisher: Random House Inc
ISBN-10: 0345440838
ISBN-13: 9780345440839
Sku: 30787958
Publish Date: 4/10/2007
Dimensions:
(in Inches) 8.25H x 5.25L x 0.75T
Pages:
320
Age Range:
NA
See more in Literary
Yes, it's Schmidtie here. Hello hello. Yes, this is Schmidtie speaking.| He had knocked the telephone off his night table and was groping under the bed for the receiver. People shouldn't be calling a retired gent before nine. Or was this some sort of bad news? (from the first line)
| Schmidt struggles with doubts over his May-December romance after Carrie refuses his marriage proposals; his humorless daughter returns, jilted and asking for money; and he encounters a mysterious Egyptian billionaire who may hold the key to his ultimate fate. *Author: Begley, Louis *Series Title: Ballantine Readers Circle *Publication Date: 2001/10/01 *Number of Pages: 291 *Binding Type: Paperbound *Language: English *Depth: 0.75 *Width: 5.25 *Height: 8.25 |
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From the Publisher:
Recently widowed, Albert Schmidt has triumphantly rediscovered domestic bliss in the Hamptons with Carrie, the Puerto Rican waitress who is younger than his daughter. Schmidt is content with keeping his own hours and steering his own course, even as he becomes entertained--and increasingly ensnared-- by the odd billionaire Michael Mansour. Among Schmidt's other heartbreaks and delights is the scandal engulfing his detested son-in-law. Where will it all lead? Is Mansour a true friend or just a big cat playing with a WASP mouse? Can May and December remain on the same calendar as the sun sets? Through it all, one thing is clear: Schmidt has found a new life far beyond the deck chair. With the elegance and mordant wit readers have come to expect of him, Louis Begley has created a magnificent story of how virtue may be rewarded. Schmidt struggles with doubts over his May-December romance after Carrie refuses his marriage proposals; his humorless daughter returns, jilted and asking for money; and he encounters a mysterious Egyptian billionaire who may hold the key to his ultimate fate.Recently widowed, Albert Schmidt has triumphantly rediscovered domestic bliss in the Hamptons with Carrie, the Puerto Rican waitress who is younger than his daughter. Schmidt is content with keeping his own hours and steering his own course, even as he becomes entertained--and increasingly ensnared-- by the odd billionaire Michael Mansour. Among Schmidt's other heartbreaks and delights is the scandal engulfing his detested son-in-law. Where will it all lead? Is Mansour a true friend or just a big cat playing with a WASP mouse? Can May and December remain on the same calendar as the sun sets? Through it all, one thing is clear: Schmidt has found a new life far beyond the deck chair. With the elegance and mordant wit readers have come to expect of him, Louis Begley has created a magnificent story of how virtue may be rewarded. |
Annotation:
In this sequel to ABOUT SCHMIDT, Begley's eponymous hero is trying to convince his absurdly young girlfriend to marry him. At the same time, his maddening daughter's marriage has unraveled and she returns home in need of money. But when Schmidt meets an Egyptian billionaire, it seems that his troubles may be over. A New York Times Notable Book for 2001.
In this sequel to ABOUT SCHMIDT, Begley's eponymous hero is trying to convince his absurdly young girlfriend to marry him. At the same time, his maddening daughter's marriage has unraveled and she returns home in need of money. But when Schmidt meets an Egyptian billionaire, it seems that his troubles may be over. A New York Times Notable Book for 2001.
Author Bio
Louis Begley
Begley grew up as a Jewish child in Poland under German occupation. When he was 13, his family emigrated to Brooklyn. He majored in English at Harvard, and served in the U.S. Army, stationed in Germany, from 1954 to 1956. He then attended Harvard Law School and began the practice of law in New York City, which he has maintained even after becoming a celebrated writer of fiction. He is married to the historian Anka Muhlstein and has five children. He wrote his first novel, WARTIME LIES, when he was 58.
Praise
New York Times Book Review
"SCHMIDT DELIVERED is marred by occasional false notes and whole patches of unconvincing dialogue. There are some unsatisfyingly monochromatic characters as well--the most egregious example being the awful Charlotte, who one would have thought had fulfilled her awfulness quotient in the first installment of the Schmidt saga....I'm still not sure I'd want Schmidtie as a dinner companion....but Begley has made me curious enough about him to want to read more about the renegade opinions and touching glimpses of vulnerability that lurk behind his inhospitable facade." - Daphne Merkin 12/17/2000 New York Times
"SCHMIDT DELIVERED is not an eventful book. Instead, it describes the minutiae of Schmidt's quiet post-retirement life in details that can border on the absurd. [But] Schmidt's wry detachment can serve him well as he dissects even the most seemingly minor matter with a moralist's eye." - Janet Maslin 12/14/2000
"SCHMIDT DELIVERED is marred by occasional false notes and whole patches of unconvincing dialogue. There are some unsatisfyingly monochromatic characters as well--the most egregious example being the awful Charlotte, who one would have thought had fulfilled her awfulness quotient in the first installment of the Schmidt saga....I'm still not sure I'd want Schmidtie as a dinner companion....but Begley has made me curious enough about him to want to read more about the renegade opinions and touching glimpses of vulnerability that lurk behind his inhospitable facade." - Daphne Merkin 12/17/2000 New York Times
"SCHMIDT DELIVERED is not an eventful book. Instead, it describes the minutiae of Schmidt's quiet post-retirement life in details that can border on the absurd. [But] Schmidt's wry detachment can serve him well as he dissects even the most seemingly minor matter with a moralist's eye." - Janet Maslin 12/14/2000

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