Wednesday, May 15, 2019

Where'd You Go, Bernadette - Finally a Movie

I read a review copy of Where'd You Go, Bernadette? back in 2012 (can't believe it's been almost seven years) and I've been hearing speculation about a movie version for what seems like forever.  Well it looks as if the movie is finally going to be released in August and will star Cate Blanchette, Laurence Fishburne, and Billy Crudup, among others.  I'm a bit surprised that the official movie trailer reveals so much detail about the plot, but I have to admit that it looks really good.  Honestly, I'm just thankful that studios are still making movies for adults; I suppose that all those computer-generated comic book things are subsidizing what I consider to be the good stuff.




In case you are interested in reading the book before its movie version is released in August, I'm re-posting my September 2012 review below to help you make up your mind as to whether or not this one is for you.

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No one in Seattle really knows much about Bernadette Fox.  And that it is precisely why the other mothers at her daughter's prestigious private-school love to gossip about her so much.  Oh, they know that her husband is one of the stars on the Microsoft campus, and they all like her bright fourteen-year-old daughter, Bee, just fine.  But Bernadette has committed the cardinal sin among the private-school mother set: she refuses to "volunteer" for any of the little jobs that take up so much of their time.  

Bernadette does not even pretend that she wants to be involved.  Not only does she not speak to them in the school drop-off zone, she doesn't even notice when she runs over the foot of one mother insisting to speak with her.  Something is wrong with this woman; they are sure of it, and they are going to make her pay for it.

Elgie knows that something is going on with Bernadette but his top secret project for Microsoft, and the huge amount of money he brings home for managing it, allow him to ignore the problem - or, at least, postpone dealing with it.  Things do seem to be going well enough, after all.  Bernadette is managing the home front efficiently (although with help he knows nothing about), and Bee is doing so well in her studies that she has qualified to claim her promised reward: a family trip to Antarctica.  

Then all hell breaks lose, Bernadette disappears, and, after a while, Bee seems to be the only one still looking for her.  

Believe it or not, serious as all of this sounds, Where'd You Go, Bernadette is the funniest novel I have read this year.  The book, a satirical look at the whole Microsoft/Seattle lifestyle, is filled with laugh-out-loud moments that will have the reader wondering just who the "crazies" in the story really are.  But, although it sometimes borders on slapstick, the novel does offer some touching reminders and insights into the relationship between mothers and daughters.  It will be young Bee, after all, who refuses to give up the search for her missing mother - even when others are certain that she is lost forever - and the precocious teen is determined to go to the ends of the earth to find her.  

Among the memorable "little moments" in the novel, is the scene in which Bee discovers the wonder of Abbey Road, the 1969 Beatles album that was to be the last the band ever recorded.  Bee's shock and embarrassment when her mother sings along with every one of the songs - in perfect sync with the recorded vocals - is a smile-inducing reminder that children find it impossible to believe their parents were ever young enough to be "cool."  Even Bee, a girl who considers her mom to be her best friend, cannot quite make that leap.

Adding to the fun, Where'd You Go, Bernadette is very cleverly structured to tell its story largely via a series of email messages, handwritten notes, transcripts of conversations, and the like.  This places the reader inside the heads of a variety of characters who reveal more about themselves than they want to reveal - probably even to themselves.  This one is hard to put down.
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And as a bonus, here's the video that first caught my attention:

6 comments:

  1. I thought this book was a fun read. It'll be interesting to see how the movie compares.

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  2. It's been a while since I've read this one, but the trailer seems pretty true to the book - at least on the main points of the plot as I remember them.

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  3. I haven't read WHERE'D YOU GO, BERNADETTE? yet, although I've heard good things about it. Sounds like the cast for the movie is really good. Hopefully they'll do the book justice.

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    1. If the trailer is any indication, it looks like they've been true to the book but it's always hard to know without sitting through the whole movie. It's one I know I'll see at some point, even if it's a home-viewing.

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  4. This is one I’ve been wanting to read for awhile, but haven’t gotten to it. Now that the movie’s actually happening, I better get on it.

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    1. I think you'll enjoy it, Annie. It caught me by surprise and I had more fun with it than I ever expected I would.

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