Kirkus Reviews QR Code
ALICE SADIE CELINE by Sarah Blakley-Cartwright

ALICE SADIE CELINE

by Sarah Blakley-Cartwright

Pub Date: Nov. 28th, 2023
ISBN: 9781668021590
Publisher: Simon & Schuster

What happens when a celebrated feminist carries on a highly charged affair with her only daughter’s closest friend?

Despite very different temperaments, Alice and Sadie have been inseparable since adolescence. They remain so in their early 20s, though easygoing Alice is halfheartedly pursuing an acting career in Los Angeles while hardworking Sadie remains in the Bay Area doggedly working her way up in a design firm. Celine is Sadie’s mother, a professor of lesbian-feminist theory at Berkeley who works hard to remain unconventional. When Alice gets a part in a play and Sadie can’t attend, she asks Celine to go in her place. A comic romantic nightmare ensues. Forty-four-year-old Celine is gobsmacked by her sudden attraction to Alice, whom she’s never before found particularly interesting, and Alice, who has enjoyed sex with a lot of men, surprises herself by responding to Celine’s attraction in kind. Caught up in their mutual desires and unable to acknowledge that Sadie may see their behavior as betrayal, the lovers tacitly agree not to mention their affair to her, even as weeks pass by. Meanwhile, Sadie is involved in her own sexual crisis: still being a virgin at age 23. Thanks to her unorthodox childhood with Celine, she's developed inhibitions she's trying to overcome, so far unsuccessfully, with her conveniently adoring, nerdy boyfriend—who, like Alice’s and Sadie’s fathers, remains so palely sketched he barely registers. The novel flits among the three women without going deep. Readers learn about Alice’s emotionally chilly mother and sympathize with Sadie’s trials as Celine’s daughter. Ultimately, though, the novel belongs to Celine, a larger-than-life personality full of contradictions. Her boundless love can be smothering, her ideas smart but half-baked, her boundary-breaking playful and cruel. She’s a would-be feminist goddess, monstrous yet hard to dislike.

A lighthearted romp, tinged with melancholy, that gently pokes fun at sexual mores and those who defy them.