Thanks for the link to Brueghel's painting,
Pat - must add I appreciated the little magnifying glass AND your hint as to where to find Icarus.
What a terrible way for this son to discover that his mother's cancer has spread. And instead of bemoaning the fact, she tells him to bring her a wonderful book - he does - Broughtman's
Savage Detectives. I've never heard of the book, or the author - not sure I'd like it. Mom had read Michael Thomas'
American Dream . (I've never heard of either book, or author, have you? Not sure I want to read them just yet - "both about disappointment." But this was how the little book club got started, the first books they read and discussed together after the diagnosis.
I'm going to admit, I was a intimidated when first reading about this family. They ALL seem bigger than life. I thought they would be "regular people" - like me and my son maybe. Mary Anne Shwalbe, a director of Admissions at Harvard, heading endless organizations - building a library in Afghanistan...and the son, Head of a big publishing house.
Like fiction, isn't it? I have just finished Wallace Stegnar's
Crossing to Safety. - Could not put it down! This was fiction -
Pedln, yes, about friendship - one of the characters had polio has a young mother, but the story was really about a strong-willed woman with the same diagosis as Mary Anne Schwalbe.
Will writes of his mother - "Mom always felt compelled to go ahead with any plan she'd made, whether she was feeling up to it or not."
He's describing Stegnar's Charity Lang to a tee. A wonderful book, compelling and beautifully written. If you haven't read it, I recommend it -
highly.
Mabel - I think of John O'Hara in terms of his movies - as you say, a soap-opera in a book/movie. Have you read his books? Well written - or well-scripted? Should we read him - or are his movies enough?