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Bookends: A Novel
Bookends: A Novel

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Author: Jane Green
Publisher: Broadway
Category: Book

List Price: $14.00
Buy Used: $0.01
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Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 153 reviews
Sales Rank: 13162

Media: Paperback
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 368
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.6
Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.3 x 0.8

ISBN: 0767907817
Dewey Decimal Number: 823.914
EAN: 9780767907811
ASIN: 0767907817

Publication Date: May 27, 2003
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: With pride from Motor City. All books guaranteed. Best Service, best prices.

Also Available In:

  • Audio Cassette - Bookends
  • Kindle Edition - Bookends: A Novel
  • Hardcover - Bookends: A Novel

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Similar Items:

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  • Jemima J: A Novel About Ugly Ducklings and Swans
  • Swapping Lives

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com Review
Bookends, Jane Green's third comic novel of contemporary love and lust, proves beyond a doubt that when it comes to light reading, plot is everything. Bookends makes a great case study because it has little going for it besides plot. Dialogue? Stilted. Characters? Cliched. Writing style? Sloppy. And yet the book is well-nigh impossible to put down. A few friends meet at university: Simon, the chirpy gay character; Portia, the glamour girl; Josh, the adorable, unpretentious catch; and Cath, the overweight, insecure narrator. Portia strays from their crowd, but the other three remain friends into their 30s. Now successful Londoners, each faces a personal crisis: singleton Cath leaves a secure job to start a bookstore; Simon looks for love; Josh's marriage goes through growing pains. And then Portia, as intimidating and elegant as ever, wanders back into their lives--with surprising results. Green is a past master of the ugly-duckling-turned-swan story. Cath's transformation--neatly echoed by the changes in the lives of her friends--is completely addictive. Plot does indeed rule. --Claire Dederer

Product Description
On the heels of her national bestsellers Jemima J and Mr. Maybe, British sensation Jane Green delivers a sparkling tale of old friends reunited and old jealousies rekindled.

Catherine Warner and Simon Nelson are best friends: total opposites, always together, and both unlucky in love. Cath is scatterbrained, messy, and–since she had her heart broken a few years back–emotionally closed off. Si is impossibly tidy, bitchy, and desperate for a man of his own. They live in London’s West Hampstead along with their lifelong friends, Josh and Lucy, who are happily married with a devil-spawn child and a terrifying Swedish nanny, Ingrid.

All’s well (sort of) until the sudden arrival of a college friend–the stunningly beautiful Portia, who’s known for breaking hearts. Though they’ve grown up and grown apart from Portia, the four friends welcome her back into the fold. But does Portia have a hidden agenda or is she merely looking to reconnect with old friends? Her reappearance soon unleashes a rollicking series of events that tests the foursome’s friendships to the limit and leaves them wondering if a happy ending is in store.

Fortunately, Cath has plenty to take her mind off Portia’s schemes–like her gutsy decision to leave her job in advertising to fulfill her dream of opening a bookstore. And then there’s James, the sexy real-estate agent who keeps dropping by even after the bookstore deal is done. With his irresistible smile and boyish charm could he be the one to melt Cath’s heart?

Told with Jane Green’s captivating wit and flare, Bookends is above all a story about friendship–its twists, turns and complications–and how it weathers the challenges of love, ambition, marriage, and, most of all, growing up. Warmhearted, sophisticated, and full of delicious surprises, Bookends is Green’s most dazzling novel yet.


From the Hardcover edition.



Customer Reviews:   Read 148 more reviews...

5 out of 5 stars Fun and relaxing   June 30, 2002
 27 out of 34 found this review helpful

I have just finished my second Jane Green novel, Bookends. And loved every word of it.
Like the first Jane Green I read, Jemima J, this one is about the life of single Londoners, following the footprints of Bridget Jones. But still the book is worth it's own money, and is not at all predictable and boring.

A gang of University friends stay together for years after they left school, though they have lost contact with one of the girls from the gang, the beautiful Portia, queen of the gang. She broke their hearts one night and after that drifted away from the close gang. Life goes on, Josh marries Lucy, Cath stays single being hurt one time to many, and the gay Si is always hunting for the perfect man of his life.

The book is a wonderful, charming and witty story about friendship. How to give everything for your friends, how to stay together through thick and thin. Though the part of the book that charms be most is Bookends, the bookshop and cafe Cath and Lucy opens. Through this Cath meets James, but is this man the one for her? Jane Green has a charmimg way to take us through the every day life of her characters.

The ending is surprisingly, and may be a little out of Greens usual style, though it makes you think about the values of your live, the values of your friendships.

Britt Arnhild Lindland


5 out of 5 stars A dramatic, comedic, and real look at friendship + love!   August 11, 2002
 13 out of 13 found this review helpful

I'm a sucker for a romantic comedy, and after Bridget Jones's Diary, I became eager to read more books in that genre. When I picked up Bookends by Jane Green, I was looking for a light, fun read, but what I received was a novel that would not let me put it down. Bookends is hilarious, witty, and full of tension and drama, and characters that you will love...and some you might not like all that well.

In Bookends, the reader is introduced - by way of narrator, Catherine "Cath" Warner - to a group of friends who meet in school and though individually different as night and day, they become a tight clique of trusted friends. That is, until the ever-beautiful Portia - the friend thought to be the sun in the clique's universe - destroys friendships that were meant to last forever.

Fast forward ten years where we find Cath and lifelong friends, Josh and Lisa, and her best friend, Si, living and loving in their early-thirties, in London. Si, the sweet, adorable, and gay love of Cath's life spends most of his time in friendly counsel with Cath regarding the lack of men in their lives, and discussing how each deals with that situation in their own way, whether it's Cath's refusal to believe she wants a man in her life, or Si's ability to lower his standards, for fear of living alone.

Just as everyone's life seems to be on track, a blast from the past in the form of an older and more self-indulgent Portia, pops back into the group's tight circle and in an instant, lives are shook up, adulterous innuendoes are cooked up and friendships are tested.

I have to say, this book is a wonderful read. I fell in love with the main character, Cath, and her feelings on friendship and love. Green does a great job in creating characters that you want to care about, characters that you can feel and even relate to. I think readers will be thoroughly and happily surprised that there is more to this book than pure entertainment. I finished this book with tears in my eyes because I felt a connection with Green's characters and I felt moved by the way Green deals with some heavy subjects in this novel.

I would definitely recommend Bookends - love the title - to those who want a fast read with a lot of bite and wit.

Shon Bacon


5 out of 5 stars Thank you Jane Green!   July 4, 2003
 13 out of 18 found this review helpful

About half way through this book, I thought I would only give it 4 stars at most. I didn't think it was as good as Jemima J, which is the first book I read by Ms. Green. What can I say, I was WRONG!! This book is every bit as good as Jemima J and I will continue to read everything that this author writes. Her books are funny and poignant and witty and the perfect beach read....just be sure to bring plenty of sunblock because you will want to read this book in one sitting. Jane Green sure has a flare for writing the perfect British Chick-Lit novel. You will surely fall in love with Cath and Simon and Josh and Lucy and the lovely, ambitious Portia just as I did. This book has enough twists and turns within the lives of these very close friends to keep the reader happily turning the pages. So, tune in to see how they weather the storms of love, friendhip and life...you're in for a treat!!


4 out of 5 stars Jane Green's best work   June 28, 2002
 11 out of 13 found this review helpful

I have read all of Jane Green's novels and have loved them all. However, I've always thought that the theme in her novels were a bit weak and lightly researched, that is until I read Bookends.

Bookends concentrates on a group of people who have been friends since college -- Cath, the narrator; Portia, the glamazon one of the clique; Josh, the adorable and romantic one; and Si, a live-for-the-moment homosexual. The story focuses on how the lives of these people progress after Portia disintegrates from the group and how her sudden reappearance affects them.

I think this is Jane Green's best work. She has delved into the characters by turning them into people everyone could relate to. However, I think the novel would have been better if Green had written it in third person -- the characters would have been better developed individually that way. Also, this novel is rather similar to Marian Keyes's Last Chance Saloon -- except that Last Chance Saloon is far better written than this one.

Green's writing has improved through time, and I know that her work could only get better. Her novels are lighthearted and endearing and I recommend them, especially this one!


1 out of 5 stars Terrible   September 9, 2004
 9 out of 9 found this review helpful

I can't believe I spent 4 hours reading a truly horrendous book. Bookends, by Jane Green. Terrrrrible. Even more amazing is that there was 350 pages of this drivel. I can't believe I bought that stupid book. I want my 10 dollars back, dammit. Spoilers ahead, so beware.

Here's why it sucked: It was about 5 college friends, four of them stay together after college and one of they lose touch with. It's clear that it was meant to be about the one friend, Portia, coming back and having significant changes on their lives. I know this because the narrator keeps telling me how Portia has "changed the dynamics of the group" and has "changed the balance." Over. And. Over. Which would be understandable if it weren't for the fact that Portia coming back had NOTHING to do with the changes that occured. One of the changes is that Si gets AIDS cause of his jackass boyfriend. Oookay. Nothing to do with Portia. The last hundred pages of the book are about his disease and everything else is ignored. It would be fine if it all came together somehow, but I dunno. It felt like she had finished the book and then edited that part in because there was some word limit she didn't hit.

Another change she attributes to Portia is Josh cheating on his wife with Portia (or so she believes). This would understandable if it weren't for the fact that Josh wasn't cheating with Portia. However, despite being best friends with Josh for ten years, instead of asking him about it, she just decides to be mean to Portia and Josh. Later, she realizes that Josh ISN'T cheating with Portia and instead she believes he's cheating with the maid. Holy crap. More meaness towards Josh. Of course, it turns out Josh was completely faithful all along and in reality our lovely narrator is a verifiable nutjob. Oh, and she apologizes to Josh and Portia for being mean and they're like "hmm...okay. I was wondering what was up with that." I don't know what kind of long-lasting friendships this author had, but I feel sorry for her.

Of course, no book is complete without the narrator, Cathy, finding her true love. Insert James. Insert James, Cathy's bitch. James is a hunky, artistically talented, and somewhat wealthy to boot. Why is this guy single at 36? For some reason, he's attracted to Cathy who's not all that good looking, can't dress, and admittedly slept with any guy at university that feigned any amount of interest. WTF? The only thing that makes this digestible is that fact that this book is supposed to be "romance" and that genre tends to go hand in hand with "delusional" so, okay. Fine. BUT. (There's always a but.) The "romance" factor isn't even that great. Cathy basically ignores James for the majority of the book because she's dealing with Portia's "changes." He gets annoyed, but she smiles at him and is forgiven. She goes out on one real date with him and they proceed to have sex. Sooo romantic.

Oh, and the sex. HA. Holy crap. Here are two quotes:
"I start to cry. Crying this time with pleasure. With forgotten memories."
"It is exactly like riding a bicycle, and everything I thought I'd forgotten comes back in a flash, and it feels wonderful."

CAN YOU BELIEVE THIS DRIVEL!??! I actually laughed out loud. The narrator seems to be not so much a "lovably imperfect protagonist" but rather a "self-centered shallow nutjob." A little boy doesn't like her. She refers to this little 7-year old boy as the devil, etc. etc. Even though he likes others who are nice to him and treat him as an adult instead of complete idiot, there is NO WAY his dislike could be HER fault. No. The little boy MUST be evil. Yes.

Terrible book. Terrible. I want my money back.


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