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The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith
The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith







The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith

Regional author tour.Meet Georgia, SuSu, Teeny, Diane, and Linda-five women who've been best friends through thirty years since high school.

The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith

(Sept.)įorecast: A great jacket and title will have readers reaching for the book (released in a first printing of 50,000), but less-than-stellar word of mouth may stifle sales. Their obsession with proper behavior grates on the nerves, and Georgia is overwhelmingly prissy: "the possibility annoyed the poo out of me." The flashbacks to the women's sorority days are more successful-one chapter in which two of the girls, terrified of making a friend miss curfew, drive her stuck-in-reverse car five miles home backwards is a chuckler-but nothing makes this disappointing effort stand out from the ranks of Rebecca Wells wannabes.

The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith

The Red Hatters-tragic wronged wife Diane flawlessly attired corporate bride Teeny promiscuous divorcée SuSu graying, happily married Linda and narrator Georgia, a restless wife dreaming of her first love, are little more than cardboard cutouts. The plot clips along, but the characters are dislikable enough to sabotage the momentum. When Diane's husband is discovered to be cheating on her-in a condo she paid for-the five decide to turn the tables on him. Strictly abiding by a list of 12 time-honored rules labeled the "Sacred Traditions" ("Tradition 5: Mind your own business Tradition 10: With the exception of alcoholic beverages, all calories shall be in chewable form"), they serve as each others' support network. Five middle-aged women in Atlanta, former sorority sisters and now the last bastion of "civilized" (read: white and Southern) society, meet monthly to dish up gossip and drink iced tea in their red hats and purple outfits, in honor of Jenny Joseph's poem "Warning" ("When I am an old woman I shall wear purple/ With a red hat which doesn't go and doesn't suit me"). Smith's hardcover debut, Queen Bee of Mimosa Branch, was a charmer, but her newest offering falls flat.









The Red Hat Club by Haywood Smith