Summary
Summary
"A vintage version of 'Gossip Girl' meets bigger hair." -- The Skimm
"DiSclafani's story sparkles like the jumbo diamonds her characters wear to one-up each other. Historical fiction lovers will linger over every lush detail." -- People
From the bestselling author of The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls comes a story of lifelong female friendship - in all its intimate agony and joy - set within a world of wealth, beauty, and expectation.
Joan Fortier is the epitome of Texas glamour and the center of the 1950s Houston social scene. Tall, blonde, beautiful, and strong, she dominates the room and the gossip columns. Every man wants her; every woman wants to be her. Devoted to Joan since childhood, Cece Buchanan is either her chaperone or her partner in crime, depending on whom you ask. But when Joan's radical behavior escalates the summer they are twenty-five, Cece considers it her responsibility to bring her back to the fold, ultimately forcing one provocative choice to appear the only one there is.
A thrilling glimpse into the sphere of the rich and beautiful at a memorable moment in history, The After Party unfurls a story of friendship as obsessive, euphoric, consuming, and complicated as any romance.
Reviews (2)
New York Review of Books Review
IN HER DEBUT NOVEL, "The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls," Anton DiSclafani explored the constraints of female sexuality and social class at the dawn of the Great Depression, through the experiences of Southern debutantes at an equestrian boarding school. Her sophomore effort, "The After Party," revisits these themes as they play out in the lives of 1950s Houston socialites. Materially speaking, the young, pampered housewives of River Oaks want for nothing. Dresses are flown in from New York. Chauffeurs and champagne are ever at the ready. The story centers on the lifelong friendship between two members of this privileged set. Joan Fortier, the unmarried daughter of a wealthy oilman, is promiscuous, untamable, a fixture of the local gossip columns. She drinks too much and refuses to settle down, pay attention to the latest styles or shower before going out for the evening. The book's narrator, Cece Buchanan, is more conventional - essentially orphaned as a teenager when her mother died (they were abandoned by her father), she is now married with a son who, at age 3, doesn't yet speak. Cece is deeply invested in her wardrobe and home décor. Her name calls to mind Daisy Buchanan, that epitome of a woman adrift in a sea of American excess. DiSclafani excels at building suspense and has a gift for revealing private worlds through unexpected, telling details. Joan's father "believed in divine providence, the way that lucky men often do." Joan's mother advises her to sit up straight: "Spines are very suggestible." Cece describes herself as "a girl with a forgettable face, a forgettable name. But I was saved from this fate because I was Joan's best friend." Later, she says, "Without Joan, I would have been just another girl, with none of Joan's radiance to claim as my own. Because I wasn't radiant. I wasn't anything, without Joan." To a degree, her devotion feels misplaced and one-sided. Joan doesn't confide in Cece about the many mysteries of her life (a yearlong disappearance after high school, the shadowy stranger she's been spending time with), even as Cece obsessively tries to figure them out. Their relationship jeopardizes Cece's marriage and consumes Cece's thoughts far more than her son's condition does. Everything in her world is viewed through the lens of Joan. One flashback to their teenage years goes a ways toward explaining why. It's a great dramatic moment that had me holding my breath, but it strains to account for the odd dynamic that plays out between them for the next decade. Cece is particularly preoccupied with policing Joan's sex life. Once, driven to a point of near madness by a desire to save Joan from her own bad choices, Cece follows her into a hotel room, saying, "Sid and Joan might have been in there together, having sex, but I didn't care." Joan, though, doesn't appear to want or need saving. As things progress, Cece seems more like an infatuated stalker than a devoted friend. Perhaps that's the point, but we never get enough of Cece's inner life to fully understand it. DiSclafani dangles suggestions about the sexual undertone of Cece's compulsion and the notion that within a friendship "one woman always needs the other woman less." A deeper exploration of these intriguing motivations would have made the book all the richer. Instead, there are only hints about why Cece would rather focus on Joan's life than her own: her complicated relationship with Joan's parents after her mother dies; the anxiety of dealing with a sick child ; the monotony and emptiness of her days, or as Betty Friedan described it in "The Feminine Mystique," "the problem that has no name." One wonders what Cece might make of that call to arms, published a few short years after the story ends. Within a friendship 'one woman always needs the other woman less.' J. COURTNEY SULLIVAN is the author of the novels "Commencement," "Maine" and "The Engagements."
Library Journal Review
Houston socialites and BFFs Cece -Buchanan and Joan Fortier have been the toast of River Oaks since their preschool days. With the 1950s in full swing and the girls in high school, Cece comes to live with the Fortiers after her mother dies. She acts as defender and constant companion for the willful, hard-partying Joan. When Joan abruptly skips the debutante ball to seek stardom in Hollywood, Cece is devastated but forges new friendships and begins dating her future husband, Ray. When Joan blows back into Houston, mysterious beau in tow and ready to step back into the Shamrock Hotel party scene, Cece senses that Joan is carrying secrets. As she adopts a predictable upper-class life of marriage, motherhood, and garden-club luncheons, can Cece balance Joan's burdens with her own? Best-selling author DiSclafani (The Yonahlossee Riding Camp for Girls) paints a compelling picture of the ups and downs of longstanding female friendship set against the excesses and restraints of the Mad Men era. -VERDICT Readers' opinions will vary on whether the revelation of Joan's dark secret is satisfying, but such strongly wrought characters and attention to period setting and mores should enthrall most fan of novels of intricate relationships and society such as those by Mary McCarthy, -Rebecca Wells, Fannie Flagg, and Jill Connor Brown. [See Prepub Alert, 11/2/15.]- Jennifer B. -Stidham, Houston Community Coll. © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.