Reviewed by Kristin
While browsing Tennessee READS for an audiobook, I came across
The Most Fun We Ever Had by Claire Lombardo. I almost didn’t check it
out because I had never heard of the author (despite the fact that this debut
was a New York Times bestseller—I just missed it!) and also it was long—20 ½
hours! The cover was attractive though, with four yellow ginkgo leaves lying in
a vertical line with the title overlaying the image. The title itself is also a
little non-descript, but I decided to give it a try. I’m glad I did.
David Sorenson and Marilyn Connolly met, fell in love,
married, and started a family, all in quick succession. David is a young doctor
and is struggling to build his family practice. Marilyn is almost done with her
own degree when first daughter Wendy is born, and she quickly decides that
balancing exams with motherhood is too difficult. Not to mention, second
daughter Violet comes along less than a year later. When Liza arrives there are
three, and then a decade later there is Grace.
The story moves back and forth in time, telling the Sorenson’s
story in pieces. David and Marilyn remain madly and demonstratively in love
with each other through the decades, creating a “perfect” relationship model. With
their parents seeming so happy, the girls question whether they will ever find
true love. Despite their common roots, each of David and Marilyn’s daughters
grow up to be very different and unique people.
Wendy is an independent soul from the start. Wendy married a
wealthy, somewhat older man and then is widowed all too soon. At first, this is
presented a bit stereotypically with a lot of alcohol and an extravagant
lifestyle, but as the story progresses we learn more about both the happiness
and the pain Wendy has endured.
Violet is definitely a type A personality, making straight A’s,
going to college and law school, and eventually becoming a stay-at-home mom who
manages her family’s schedule as if she’s still billing in six minute
increments. Tightly wound, Violet still has insecurities that she tries to hide
from everyone, perhaps even herself.
Liza is overshadowed by her older sisters, but manages to
become a tenured professor in her early 30’s. She has been living with Ryan for
almost a decade, and they are having a baby. But Ryan won’t get off the couch,
and living with someone who is likely clinically depressed is wearing on Liza.
Grace has finally left the family home in Chicago, going to
college in Oregon and then applying to law schools on the west coast. She is
the furthest away geographically, and perhaps the one most uncertain of
herself. Grace feels the pressure of measuring up to her older sisters who have
always thought of her as the baby.
And there is Jonah. The baby given up for adoption fifteen
years ago by one of the daughters, who is back in their lives after a series of
events which left him in foster care for most of his life.
This cast of characters is woven together with strands of
love, but pulled and pushed in different directions with the stresses of their
situations and the decisions they have made. Lombardo’s writing is moving, and
she skillfully reveals motives for characters’ previous actions at just the
right moments. This is a family saga worth reading; yes, even over several
hundred pages or many hours in the car.
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