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Search tags: cynthia-d-aprix-sweeney
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review 2017-01-31 17:32
The Nest - DNF
The Nest - Cynthia D`Aprix Sweeney

I listened to 3 CD's out of the 9 and I had to stop. I just got bored.  Leo had his drama at the beginning and he seemed to have his family tied around his finger. Bea, did she have control of the family or did she just like to think she did? Anyways, I heard enough that it just wasn't keeping my interest for a third of the book being completed. Moving on....." 

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review 2016-11-21 00:00
The Nest
The Nest - Cynthia D`Aprix Sweeney The description of this book includes the word funny which I didn't find. Really it's just a life story. Siblings are supposed to inherit a bunch of money. One has drug and legal fees that affect them all. Then the story reveals over time how they're all pretty flawed and how everyone is going to be okay in the end. All of the characters are struggling with some kind of issue. There are problems in jobs, money, attitudes and every area. The siblings are the causes of their own unhappiness and have some growing up to do. The family has it's dysfunction, lows and highs. I wasn't crazy about any of the siblings, but they seemed to have likable romantic partners and offspring for the most part. Overall, I liked it, but didn't love it. Reading this book didn't inspire any major feelings in me, but I can see how it would make an interesting tv show.
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review 2016-10-13 03:04
Nope, nope, and nope
The Nest - Cynthia D`Aprix Sweeney

If there was any way possible to get a refund on the amount of time that I just wasted reading this book, I NEED IT. I'm probably in the minority on this one but this book was flat and boring. The characters were all so narcissistic and flat and boring. The plot?...good question what was the plot? At times it seemed like it was headed in a good direction which is why I didn't dnf it but then each time it just dropped off.  Let me put it this way...this was like one of those bad Hallmark or Lifetime wanna be dramas (don't get me wrong, ya girl loves Lifetime and Hallmark...but you know there are some cheesy ass wastes of time on there from time to time). Any who I digress...I don't recommend it, this book, that is. The writing especially didn't do it for me. It was like she wanted it to be deep and one of those novels where the writing is poetic and beautiful. But wah wah ...she missed the basket. And not to mention the sprinkling of SAT vocabulary words that had no place in this novel...Annoying. 

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review 2016-06-10 20:48
The Nest Book Review
The Nest - Cynthia D`Aprix Sweeney

This is definitely a really good debut novel. But I don't if I necessarily love it as much as some people are. The ending left me a little bit underwhelmed after everything we read most of the book. I felt like a lot of things were just left unresolved. 

 

The Plum family is awaiting their "Nest" or family fund when the youngest turns 40. And its A LOT of money for each sibling. They've been counting on it for their entire lives. Then Leo, of course it's Leo, has an accident and has to use most of it up, without their permission. The dysfunctional family is at each other ends trying to figure out just how they are going to get their money back. 

 

I have to say, I think the only one I really enjoyed reading about was Leo. He's certainly the most interesting of the group -- as much of a messed up individual he is. I got a bit lost every once in a while because there are so many characters and not just the main family. There are girlfriends and husbands and daughters and friends all involved in this mess. 

 

Again, its the ending that really just left me feeling a bit disappointing. The first half of this book was very intriguing and kept me wanting more. But I never really got that "more" factor.

 

I see why it's so popular. Its a very different type of book by a new author with interesting characters and an interesting plot. Not my favorite out there but something I will easily recommend and remember. 

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review 2016-05-16 13:17
The height of dysfunction!
The Nest - Cynthia D`Aprix Sweeney

The Nest, Cynthia D'Aprix Sweeney, author; Mia Barrow, narrator‏

Each member of the Plumb family is preoccupied with their own greed, secrets, lies and devious behavior. Their interactions with each other are on the surface as they are all fairly egocentric. As relationships are broken and their lives are turned upside down because of highly dysfunctional Leo Plumb, one has to wonder whether or not his siblings and parents have actually created the monster by enabling him to become the villain. His irresponsible behavior and his car accident that caused grievous injuries to his passenger and could have caused a major scandal, has placed his brothers and sisters in various chaotic situations. Francie Plumb, the rather self-centered mother of all the Plumb children, and her current husband, want to contain the story at all costs. Therefore, since she is in charge of the small bit of money that her first husband had put aside for their four children in order to afford them a safety net when they were older, and it had grown considerably, she unilaterally, without consulting any of them, decided to disperse an exorbitant amount of their “Nest” to place Leo, the bad seed, in a fancy rehab and to pay off the victim in his car. She did not use any of her own vast fortune, and instead claimed she needed to protect herself since the downturn in the economy had taken a toll on her. The children had been eagerly awaiting their payout which was fast approaching with the youngest daughter’s 40th birthday, at which time it could be doled out. Now, only 10% of their expected fortunes awaited them.

Because each of the siblings had been expecting a large sum of money, they had overextended themselves in one way or another and were deep in debt. Leo’s accident and their mother’s need to keep it quiet turned their lives upside down. They were all, with the exception of daughter Bea, deep in arrears with bills they could now, not pay. Without the windfall, many of the families were suddenly in desperate need of cash, and their reactions varied from sympathy toward their brother to anger at him and their mother. When a contrite Leo asked for their trust and promised that he would try and repay them in 90 days, what could they do? Could he be trusted or would he revert to his former reckless life and behavior?  Would he burn all his bridges? What choices would he make? Would he be responsible or revert to his past behavior, drinking, doing drugs, womanizing and lying? They were between a rock and a hard place.

Will the family be able to put themselves back together again? Will adversity destroy them or bring them closer? From my own personal experience, I know that it is difficult to put Humpty Dumpty back together again. What would have probably been a perfect analysis of the Plumb family, in crisis, seemed to turn into a book that had a PC agenda demanding that every controversial issue on G-d’s earth have an audience. There is Stephanie, the pregnant former girlfriend of Leo Plumb who becomes a single mother. There is an illegal, under aged immigrant, in the person of a promiscuous girl who was performing a sex act when the car accident, the catalyst causing the ultimate family crisis, actually occurred. Leo is a sociopath in his early 40’s. He is married, but childless, addicted to drugs and his own pleasure, and is in the throes of a disastrous divorce from his spendthrift, money hungry, high-flying and very angry, vindictive wife, Victoria. He thinks nothing of lying and serving his own needs first, without considering anyone else. There is Vinnie who lost his arm in an IED explosion and is an angry young man. He loves Matilda and believes that she has been taken advantage of by the wealthy Plumb family and their high end attorney. They make an odd couple, one footless and one armless, like the Rodin sculpture of The Kiss that was damaged in the terrorist attack that took down the Towers. We have a retired security guard, Tommy, who finds what he thought was a message from his wife, in the wreckage of the Twin Towers after 9/11, and in a moment of indiscretion, he steals it. This damaged relic, “The Kiss”, remains hidden in his house, as he mourns his loss, and he has been tortured by its theft ever since. We have a homosexual brother, Jack, who is childless, in a relationship with Walker that is coming apart at the seams because of Jack’s questionable ethics, secrets, and lies. We have a sister, Bea, who is unmarried and childless, an author who used her brother as a character in a series of successful novels, but has had no recently published successful books. She is still mourning the loss of her married lover, Tucker, whom she nursed after his stroke until his death. She works for Paul who is a shy man who observes, supports and loves her in silence. The final sibling is sister Melody, who feels neglected and unloved by her mother. She believes she is kind of the outsider in the family. She over compensates for her mother’s neglect, now that she is the mother of twins, by being a somewhat overzealous parent. She spends far more than her pocket can afford as do most of the siblings. Her twins, who are high school students, are struggling with their own sexuality. One, Louisa, believes she is a lesbian and the other, Nora, wonders if she, therefore, is also gay, since they are twins. There is also Simone, Walter, Nathan and more. Graphic sex, too, seems to unnecessarily often pop its head on the pages of this book.

The narrator did a good job of capturing the attitudes and personalities of the characters, portraying them fairly authentically so that the listener can actually see a picture of the character in their mind’s eye. However, there were so many issues and so many characters that it is sometimes difficult to keep everything straight. For that reason, it is better to select the print version. The book is written with levity, although it is not the laugh out loud kind, and much of the subject matter made the funny lines fall flat for me.

 

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