cover image The Garden Party

The Garden Party

Grace Dane Mazur. Random House, $27 (240p) ISBN 978-0-399-17972-3

In this witty novel from Mazur (Trespass), two very different families assemble in the garden of a house in Brookline, Mass., for a rehearsal dinner. The house belongs to the Cohens, an eccentric Jewish clan. Father Pindar, an expert on ancient cultures, is doing research for a book on Babylonian cooking. Daughter Sara is dating a Jesuit priest, Dennis Lombroso. Sara’s sister, fragile Naomi, has to be coaxed out of her bedroom to attend the dinner for her brother, Adam, a poet, engaged to Eliza Barlow, whose WASPy family members are mostly attorneys. Battle lines are drawn early as Celia, Pindar’s wife, a literary critic, frets over the seating chart, and Eliza’s father, Stephen, likens the house to a third world country because there is no Wall Street Journal on the front hall table. As the party gets underway, Pindar’s 91-year-old mother recalls the Paris of her youth, Eliza’s brother hits on Naomi, the Barlow grandchildren go native at a nearby pond, and Adam and Eliza decide that an elopement might be the best course of action. Although the Barlows are barely differentiated, readers will be charmed by this stylish ensemble novel, which expertly dissects family dynamics over the course of one fateful day. (July)