Saturday, October 5, 2024

Six Degrees of Separation - from Long Island to Patriot Hearts

It’s time for #6degrees, inspired by Kate at Books Are My Favourite and Best. We all start at the same place as other readers, add six books, and see where it ends up. This month’s starting point is Colm Tóibín’s Long Island (2024), which I recently enjoyed (my review).  My book group read Brooklyn, the earlier book about Eilis, and I think we saw the movie together as well.
My first link is also set on Long Island, The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald (1925). For many readers it has enduring appeal, past high school assignments, due to its portrayal of human desires and flaws and of those trying to break into the world of the elite. Last summer, my sister, brother-in-law, and niece went to a musical version put on at the American Repertory Theater. It was too dark for us but still fascinating.
I am actually a bigger fan of a different book set on Long Island, The Gold Coast by Nelson DeMille (1990), who died a week or so ago. The Gold Coast is the name for the wealthiest part of Long Island. The plot involves John Sutter, a lawyer who lives there with his wife Susan, and how their lives change when a famous mafia don moves in next door.  I wonder why no one ever made a movie of this book?
My third link is DeMille, who was so generous about blurbing other writers’ books that when I worked in publishing we called him (affectionately) a quote whore. So I was amused to see writer Joseph Finder’s appreciation for a quote DeMille gave him for his thriller, The Moscow Club (1991).
Another book with a Moscow connection is The Second Lady by Irving Wallace (1980), which I just finished. I don’t remember who recommended this but I am a big fan of impersonation stories. This is a very unusual one: the KGB decides to substitute an actress (using plastic surgery and years of training) for the US President’s wife while she is visiting Russia. It’s somewhat explicit about the details undertaken to fool the president once the imposter is in place. How will she fool the President?  Will anyone realize the real First Lady is missing?
In First Lady by Susan Elizabeth Phillips (2000), the widowed first lady also disappears – but this time those around her know she is missing! She has gone on the run to escape her responsibilities and live an ordinary life, so is disguising herself with an attractive stranger and two little girls he is escorting cross-country.
My final link is more First Ladies: Patriot Hearts: A Novel of the Founding Mothers by Barbara Hambly (2007) (my review), covers the lives of Dolley Madison, Martha Washington, Abigail Adams and Sally Hemings from the 1770s through 1814. Of course, Sally Hemings was Thomas Jefferson’s slave, not his wife.
So I connected Long Island, set mostly in Ireland, with books that take place in NY’s Long Island, Washington, DC, Moscow, and back to DC. Have you read any of these? Next month (November 2, 2024), we’ll start with Sally Rooney’s latest release, Intermezzo.

8 comments:

Joanne said...

Such an interesting chain. I don't think I've read any of these.

Here's mine for this month. https://portobellobookblog.com/2024/10/05/6degrees-of-separation-for-october-2024-from-long-island-by-colm-toibin-to-swimming-to-lundy-by-amanda-prowse/

Lisa of Hopewell said...

Excellent work. Second Lady is a bit too today for me --our crazy [USA] never-ending election full of conspiracy theories!

JaneGS said...

Another fun thread! I love The Great Gatsby, but I'm giving Long Island a pass as I have come to realize that I don't like Toibin's writing all the much. The Gold Coast sounds terrific. I read The Second Lady forever ago--probably mid-80s on a camping trip--loved it and have thought about it off and on since then. Deserves a reread if I can find it! Patriot Hearts also sounds like something I would like.

Helen said...

The only book I've read from your chain this month is The Great Gatsby, although I'm not really a Fitzgerald fan. I do want to read Long Island as I loved Brooklyn!

TracyK said...

Like Helen, the only book I read on your list is The Great Gatsby, and I did not enjoy the book very much. But it is a great link.

I am glad you reminded me of Nelson DeMille. I want to read something by him. Thanks for suggesting The Gold Coast, I will look into it.

And all the books about First Ladies! Is there any type of fiction that Hambly hasn't written. She has written fantasy and mystery and also historical fiction? (And I have not read anything by her.)

thecuecard said...

I liked Toibin's sequel ... and how you tied it in setting to the Great Gatsby. Another recent Long Island-set novel is The Guest by Emma Cline -- a bit eerie. I was sad to hear about DeMille's passing.

Marianne said...

What a great idea to use the place as a link, will have to remember that for future blogs.
The only book from you list that I have read and that I would have kown that I read from Long Island is The Great Gatsby.
Here is my list:
https://momobookblog.blogspot.com/2024/10/six-degrees-of-separation-long-island.html

CLM said...

I really recommend The Gold Coast. After I wrote this post, I saw a copy on my sister's bookshelves and if I hadn't already had heavy luggage I would have borrowed it for a reread.