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ALL THAT MATTERS by Jan Goldstein

ALL THAT MATTERS

by Jan Goldstein

Pub Date: Sept. 8th, 2004
ISBN: 1-4013-0110-X
Publisher: Hyperion

A feisty grandmother and Holocaust survivor takes charge of her suicidal grandchild.

Twentysomething Jennifer, found unconscious on the beach in Venice, California, is rushed to the hospital; when she wakes up, she finds that her nana, Gabby, has flown from New York to be by her side. Jennifer’s boyfriend, we learn, had asked her to move out, and as a result she’d taken what she hoped was a lethal dose of Xanax and alcohol. No one seemed to care about her: her father, with a new wife and baby, wasn’t interested in her; and her mother had been killed in an accident on the way to Jennifer’s high school graduation. As for Gabby, her lungs are shot from smoking—she’s got bad emphysema—but she loves life and is determined to find good where she can. Haunted by her own past—she saw her parents and sister killed by the Nazis, went into hiding in a brave Polish woman’s attic and, when betrayed, was saved by partisans—she is the more determined to ensure that Jennifer has a future. After persuading Jennifer’s doctors—and her father, a Hollywood producer—that she can take care of the girl in New York and bring her back to health, the two fly east and Jennifer, reluctantly, moves in with Gabby. Initially, Jennifer resists help, but Gabby, despite her frail health, plans activities she hopes will cheer Jennifer: they clean stables, attend plays, walk in Central Park. Jennifer is still depressed and hasn’t abandoned the idea of suicide, but Gabby has her own survival stratagems, including a car trip to Bar Harbor, Maine, a place that has long held special meaning for her. There, though her own health deteriorates, she makes a final pitch for Jennifer’s life.

Should have an emotional weight and impact, but Goldstein’s first fails to move.