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Right after the Weather

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"This timely novel takes on friendship, desire, fear, and vulnerability in one incisive, witty, and powerful package." —People

"Astonishes with the force of its unexpected beauty." —The New York Times Book Review

The author of the "graceful and compassionate" (People) New York Times bestseller Carry the One presents a new and long-awaited novel exploring what happens when untested people are put to a hard test, and in its aftermath, find themselves in a newly uncertain world.
It's the fall of 2016. Cate, a set designer in her early forties, lives and works in Chicago's theater community. She has stayed too long at the fair and knows it's time to get past her prolonged adolescence and stop taking handouts from her parents. She has a firm plan to get solvent and settled in a serious relationship. She has tentatively started something new even as she's haunted by an old, going-nowhere affair. Her ex-husband, recently booted from his most recent marriage, is currently camped out in Cate's spare bedroom, in thrall to online conspiracy theories, and she's not sure how to help him. Her best friend Neale, a yoga instructor, lives nearby with her son and is Cate's model for what serious adulthood looks like.

Only a few blocks away, but in a parallel universe we find Nathan and Irene—casual sociopaths, drug addicts, and small-time criminals. Their world and Cate's intersect the day she comes into Neale's kitchen to find these strangers assaulting her friend. Forced to take fast, spontaneous action, Cate does something she's never even considered. She now also knows the violence she is capable of, as does everyone else in her life, and overnight, their world has changed. Anshaw's flawed, sympathetic, and uncannily familiar characters grapple with their altered relationships and identities against the backdrop of the new Trump presidency and a country waking to a different understanding of itself. Eloquent, moving, and beautifully observed, Right after the Weather is the work of a master of exquisite prose and a wry and compassionate student of the human condition writing at the height of her considerable powers.
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    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2019
      In her early 40s, Cate is tired of low-paying theater gigs, handouts from her parents, and a furtive affair with Dana, who will never leave her live-in girlfriend. It's also annoying that she can't dislodge ex-husband Graham, just dumped by wife No. 3 from her spare bedroom and from his obsession with government surveillance--paranoia entirely justified, in his view, by Donald Trump's recent election. Still, Cate seems on her way to better things; she's dating well-heeled Maureen and lands a job designing an off-Broadway show for a high-powered writer-director team that could ratchet up her career. However, menacing interspersed sections voiced by Nathan, a sociopath living with drug addicted Irene, suggest danger ahead. It's quickly evident that their crash pad is somewhere near Cate's best friend Neale's house, and as Nathan's monologues grow increasingly creepier, we wait for a collision. Meanwhile, Anshaw (Carry the One, 2012, etc.) crafts an engaging narrative with her customary precision and tart humor: A blowsy, "recently pretty" character "appears to do most of her shopping at Renaissance fairs," and parking enforcement in Chicago, "once a lazy, city-run revenue effort, has been sold off to a ruthless corporation based somewhere in the Middle East...meter readers in Day-Glo vests troll relentlessly, ubiquitously." In a cast of richly drawn characters, Cate is foremost: oddly maladroit socially for a theater worker, madly in love with Graham's dog, Sailor, prone to imagining people's backstories (including the décor of their homes) in judgmental terms, but essentially kind. She's totally unprepared for the brutal confrontation that occurs halfway through the novel, but she forges ahead with her big opportunity in New York, just the way people do in real life. Anshaw never amps up her fiction with melodrama or neat conclusions, and she leaves her characters changed but by no means finished in an indeterminate yet satisfying finale. Another treat from the great Anshaw: sharply observed, unsentimentally compassionate, always cognizant of life's complexities.

      COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 12, 2019
      Anshaw (Carry the One) brings a fresh, keen voice to this story of modern lesbian life. In 2016 Chicago, 40-something Cate, a theater set designer, needs a boost in her low-level career. Her likable, wealthy, neurotic ex-husband Graham is temporarily living with her, despite their divorce many years before, when Cate had accepted that she was a lesbian. Cate tries to improve her unsatisfying life—and recover from the mortification of Trump winning the 2016 presidential election—by dating a seemingly ideal woman, a costume designer named Maureen, but Cate’s quirks and immaturity prevent her from convincing herself that she has found a just-right partner, or that she can achieve security in her profession. The narrative also features a thread involving two scruffy adults who stopped by for candy on Halloween and turn out to be addicts, and the narrative occasionally turns to brief vignettes of their lives with drugs and the homes they invade, adding suspense and culminating with a violent intersection of the two story lines. The danger of the addicts inspires the creative Cate, who has been surviving mostly on help from others, to grow up. Anshaw’s account of a woman seeking love as she struggles to make a living in her chosen profession will captivate readers.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from September 15, 2019
      Anshaw's (Carry the One, 2012) compassionate novels are propelled by her preternatural gift for close observation, so it was a stroke of genius to create a hyper-attentive set-designer narrator. Not only does Cate take in every detail of every scene, she also has strong opinions about all that she surveys, making her inner monologue stingingly precise and often hilarious. She is slowly building a reputation in Chicago, primarily with gay-themed productions, and barely getting by. Now in her forties, Cate is trying to extract herself from her affair with Dana and convince herself to go all-in with costume designer Maureen, while her once-again divorced ex-husband holes up in her apartment and succumbs to deep conspiracy paranoia as Trump takes office. At least her ex's dog brings Cate bliss, and she cherishes her longtime friendship with yoga teacher Neale and her 12-year-son. But just when Cate gets her big break?a prestigious off-Broadway production of a play about Vita Sackville-West and Virginia Woolf, she arrives at Neale's place during a horrific home invasion and brutal attack. With sharply drawn characters, an ensnaring plot, and a look back at closeted gay lives, Anshaw, acutely attuned to the shifting weather of emotions and relationships, insightfully dramatizes the insistence of desire over convention and expediency and the endless reverberations of violence.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)

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