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| AUTHOR: | Gail Parent |
| CATEGORY: | Book |
| MANUFACTURER: | Overlook TP |
| ISBN: | 1585674710 |
| TYPE: | Jewish American Novel And Short Story, Popular American Fiction, Fiction, Fiction - General, Humorous, Jewish women, New York (N.Y.), Single women, Suicidal behavior |
| MEDIA: | Paperback |
| # OF MEDIA: | 1 |
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Customer Reviews of Sheila Levine is Dead and Living in New York
This is an all time fav! Read this book years and years ago when I got it from the library. I recently found it in a used book store and snatched it up. It is now a part of my "favorites" bookshelf. <
>Loved every minute of reading this book. I actually have read it more than once, it's such an easy read. If you are from New York it is especially funny... if you are from New York and Jewish it's hysterical. All the woman in my family have read this book and loved it! <
>Thrilled to hear a sequel is coming out! Thank you Gail Parent!
Funny and sad...but mostly very funny!
A couple of reviewers have given this book a bad review. They both sound like idiots. One of them doesn't even seem to have read the book; this person said that Sheila was a PROSTITUTE! Well, let me clear THAT one up right now. Sheila is NOT a prostitute. She's a Jewish woman with stereotypical Jewish parents and she has had it drummed into her that the most important thing in life for a woman is to be married.
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>Sheila lives in New York and has tried to live the breezy, carefree New York girl life she's always seen depicted in Doris Day movies. But Doris Day never had to deal with living in a cramped apartment with various wacko roommates; Doris never had a low-paying boring job and a meddling, nagging mother. And Doris always had a lot of handsome eligible men vying for her hand in marriage. Poor Sheila comes to realize that life as a single, overweight, not particularly pretty woman in New York City is a kind of hell on earth, especially if you're desperate to get married...to ANYBODY. She has a long relationship with a boring unattractive man she doesn't even like but she's willing to settle for him, if he'd only marry her. She proposes to a gay friend of hers, saying that if they were married she'd have his kids and he could do whatever he wanted to do with men. Sheila is really quite sad; for her, being with someone is better than being with no one, and she feels inadequate because she's not married. She feels like a failure because she's not married and is so fed up with trying to get a guy to marry her that she decides to commit suicide. Obviously Sheila's incredibly screwed up. She believes that her obsession with marriage stems from being conditioned from earliest childhood that the most important thing a Jewish girl must achieve in her life is marriage. Maybe so. But Sheila doesn't do anything to make herself see things in a different light; she makes a few half-hearted attempts at therapy but her efforts go nowhere. The book is her suicide note.
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>All of this probably seems very depressing and it is in places. But Sheila's self-deprecating viewpoint, her observations about the people she comes in contact with and her descriptions of the frequently horrid situations that befall her are almost always funny as hell. Which is why it's kind of a shock that in some places in the book the reader might feel like crying. An example of this is Sheila's delayed reaction to the ordeal of having to attend her sister's wedding. You want to cry for Sheila.
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>This book was released in the seventies, so it may seem dated to some people. I read this book in the seventies, but it still makes me smile and feel sad for Sheila Levine. It's a great book!
Sheila Levine is dead and living in New York
Great book. I've bought this book three times in the 80's, lent them out, never got them back, then it went out of publication. I bought three this time and kept two and gave one away.