All Adults Here : A funny, uplifting and big-hearted novel about family - an instant New York Times bestseller - Emma Straub

All Adults Here

A funny, uplifting and big-hearted novel about family - an instant New York Times bestseller

By: Emma Straub

Paperback | 9 July 2020 | Edition Number 1

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The New York Times bestseller
'A gorgeous and witty storyteller' Elizabeth Gilbert, author of City of Girls
'Hugely talented' BBC Radio 4 Woman's Hour
__________

Coming of age isn't just for kids.

Astrid Strick has always tried to do her best for her three children. Now, they're finally grown up - but you could be forgiven for thinking otherwise.

Elliott doesn't have any idea who he really is, or how to communicate with his own sons. Porter is, at last, pregnant - but feels incapable of rising to the challenge. Nicky has fled to distant New Mexico, where he's living the bohemian dream.

And Astrid herself is up to things that would make her children's hair curl...

Until now, the family have managed to hide their true selves from each other. But when Nicky's incorrigibly curious daughter Cecelia comes to stay, her arrival threatens to upturn everything.

After all, when it comes to family: can you ever really keep a secret?

Witty, astute, and irresistibly readable, All Adults Here is a novel about how to survive inside a modern family from New York Times bestselling author Emma Straub.

__________

Staff Review by Olivia Fricot

Do we really need another novel about a semi-affluent yet dysfunctional white family? If it’s as good as All Adults Here, the new novel by Emma Straub, then the answer is an emphatic yes. Straub proves this trope to be the gift that just keeps on giving with a witty and perceptive novel about the complexities of modern family life.

The plot of All Adults Here unfolds in Clapham, an idyllic town in the Hudson Valley which has been home to the Strick family for decades. Matriarch Astrid is a widow in calm control of her life who has found love again in the form of a woman named Birdie, but who can’t quite manage to connect with her adult children. Eldest child Elliott seems to have the perfect life, with the job, the wife and the kids to go with it, yet he is miserable and resentful. Handsome teen screen idol Nicky is too busy living in a bohemian New Mexico fantasy to properly deal with his daughter Cecilia after an incident at school. And the lone daughter Porter, who has always marched to the beat of her own drum, has decided to have a baby while remaining single and running her goat farm. For years the Stricks have lived at arms length from each other, but their carefully calibrated existence is upended when Cecelia arrives in town to stay and Astrid decides to reveal the truth about her late period of sexual self-discovery. As you can imagine, small town family chaos ensues.

All Adults Here is incidentally funny, in that Straub is very good at drawing out the humour of a situation with subtlety. After all, there’s often nothing more ridiculous than a group of adults playing at being grown ups in dire situations. But there is a bitter sting in the humour’s tail, as the characters struggle against the walls they’ve built between themselves and their family members. Straub explores each individual character and their story with patience and the omniscient love and care that only an author could have for their creations. The result is a wise and warmly funny novel about how hard it can be to be your truest self around the people who are supposed to know you best.

Whether you’re looking for your next book club read or a literary companion for your Saturday afternoons spent curled up on the couch, All Adults Here is the perfect thing.

Praise for Emma Straub:

'Funny, poignant and beautifully observed' Jojo Moyes
'Witty and big-hearted ... leaves you smiling for days' Maria Semple
'Intimate, epic, beautifully observed' Jennifer Egan
'Smart, compelling ... irresistible' Liane Moriarty
'Has all the pleasures of Anne Tyler's compelling family portraits . . . with a Lorrie Moore-like sense of the absurdities of contemporary life' Michiko Kakutani, New York Times

Industry Reviews
A novel about how we try and fail at every age and yet somehow survive. It is brimming with kindness, forgiveness, humour and love and yet (magically) is also a page turner that held me captive until it was finished. This is Emma Straub's absolute best and the world will love it -- Ann Patchett
Literary sunshine * New York Times *
A wonderful read -- Elizabeth Strout
Smartly observant, wryly witty, big-hearted . . . Fans of Ann Patchett, Anne Tyler and Lily King should seek [Straub] out * The Sunday Times *
This beautifully written book delves deeply, perceptively and humorously into the contemporary human condition * Daily Mail *
A warm and witty story about a family learning to accept the mistakes of the past and feeling their way towards a new, more truthful way of being together. Emma Straub has such a wonderful talent for depicting small-town existence, as well as the challenges and frustrations of family life, that I was utterly immersed in the world of the Stricks. It's one of those books that leaves you feeling as if you've visited a new place and met new friends. All Adults Here is a joy to read -- Sarah Haywood, author of The Cactus
If you can imagine a glorious mash-up of Elizabeth Strout and Gilmore Girls, All Adults Here is is * Red *
If you're a fan of Anne Tyler's writing, you'll love this captivating well-observed family drama * Good Housekeeping *
A novel full of poignant insights into family * Woman & Home *
In All Adults Here, Straub cements her status as a master of the domestic ensemble drama. While readers will relate to the comfortable familiarity of Straub's work, it has also taken on an unexpected air of escapism * Time Magazine *
Likely to be the book that every single person will be reading this summer * Bookpage *
An affecting family saga that juggles issues as weighty as abortion, gender identity and bullying with ease * USA Today *
Emma Straub is a master of the breezy, but still literary, family drama. Her fifth novel. . . . promises to be another sprawling, big-hearted page-turner * LitHub *
A warm, funny novel about the lifecycle of one family * Sheerluxe *
Straub etches in the comforting, often funny truths readers love her for. Like us, her characters are always getting older but never feeling quite old enough to do the right thing, to be the people they want to be, to let go of the past, and they're certainly never ready to die. An all-out celebration of the life force in ourselves and in our families * Booklist, Starred Review *
As always, Straub draws her characters warmly, making them appealing in their self-centeredness and generosity, their insecurity and hope. . . . Straub has a sharp eye for her characters' foibles and the details of their liberal, upper-middle-class milieu. With humor and insight, Straub creates a family worth rooting for * Kirkus *
No less charming than the rest of her oeuvre, about one family growing up and ageing, and how the parent-child roles between parents and their children is swapped * Thrillist *
Will make you question your entire childhood, and how much your parents influenced it as you learn one mother's perspective of what went right and what went wrong with her own family * Marie Claire *
Smart and funny and warm, the kind of novel you fall into and don't ever want to end, which is exactly what we need now * The Times *
The book has already roused a flood of fans clamoring to find out how Astrid's story ends * Reader's Digest *
The warm and funny novel only Emma Straub can deliver to us in this time of need * Paper Magazine *
There's no drama like family drama as Emma Straub proves in this touching, humorous, and eye-opening new novel... All Adults Here weaves a memorable tale about navigating some of our most important, and most maddening, relationships * Town and Country *
There's refuge to be found in stories of everyday people going about their lives...Emma Straub has become adept at finding amusement in the mundane, and her newest, All Adults Here, might just be her best yet * Oprah Magazine *
Perceptive and fun * AARP *
It's good company -- Leigh Haber, Book Editor at O, The Oprah Magazine
In her witty new novel, All Adults Here, Emma Straub examines adolescence, ageing, gender, and sexuality through the nuanced experiences of three generations of a New York family * Harper's Bazaar US *
Come for the close examination of parental child roles, stay for goats * Good Housekeeping US *
Unlike parents when it comes to their children, novel readers are allowed to have favourite characters. This will be an impossible task for many readers of All Adults Here, in which Emma Straub switches among the perspectives of eight characters who are all endearing in their disarmingly muddleheaded or abjectly truth-seeking ways...gasp-worthy...belongs in the company of Cathleen Schine, Tom Perrotta and other fiction writers who understand that the degree of humour that can be teased from family drama is often directly proportional to the extent of the family's misery * Shelf Awareness *
All Adults Here is a master class on the small-scale American drama. There's a wry wink in the title; being grown up is no guarantee that you have it figured out. Ensconced in their upstate New York bubble, the Strick clan is the perfect show case...Yet this warm, optimistic novel argues that one should keep trying, regardless. All Adults Here affirms the value of community and family, no matter the strife that may rise up within them * Vogue US *
Set over the course of an upstate New York summer, this shrewd, kindly tale embraces a topical spread of inter-generational challenges, yielding tart truths about love, class and family. It's spry and satisfying * Mail on Sunday *
A warm, funny novel * SheerLuxe *
If you can imagine a glorious mash-up of Elizabeth Strout and Gilmore Girls, All Adults Here is it * Red *
Set over the course of an upstate New York summer, this shrewd, kindly tale embraces a topical spread of inter-generational challenges, yielding tart truths about love, class and family. It's spry and satisfying. * Mail on Sunday *
A novel full of poignant insights into family * Woman & Home *
If you're a fan of Anne Tyler's writing, you'll love this captivating, well-observed family drama * Good Housekeeping *
Busting with witty and poignant observations about the messiness of family -- Jenna Bush Hager * Read with Jenna Book Club Pick *
Emma Straub has done it again! All Adults Here introduces us to the Stricks, a delightfully flawed family, with matriarch Astrid at the centre...I know I've been having trouble adulting during this time (seriously, I have to cook, again?!), and the characters in this novel feel like they're struggling right alongside me * Read It Forward *
All Adults Here will make you question your entire childhood * Marie Claire US *
All Adults Here is deliciously funny and infectiously warm - a clever blend of levity and poignant insights. Straub's flair for irony and wit shine, and she puts a fresh (and progressive) spin on the age-old multigenerational family saga * Washington Post *
The queen of the summer novel...we have turned to Emma Straub to bring us highly enjoyable, yet still thought-provoking, tales about witty protagonists in the throes of life changes * Entertainment Weekly *

Straub's novel takes her signature wit upstate, exploring the complexities of small-town life and what it's
like to live as an adult in the same place where you grew up

* Deadline *
It takes rare skill to make everyday family ups and downs so pleasurable to read but Straub brings both a deceptive light touch and a flinty sense of humour to this breezy big-hearted portrait of ordinary people trying to negotiate the landscape of being a grown up. A superior slice of domestic fiction for fans of Anne Tyler and Ann Patchett * Metro *
Pulsating with perceptive wit . . . entertaining * Sunday Post *
Great for fans of Liane Moriarty * Harpers Bazaar *
Whips along with feel-good momentum, driven by warmth and love * Press Association *
Written with true warmth and wit * Bella *
Praise for Emma Straub * - *
It's the beautifully drawn, vibrant characters that make this smart, compelling novel so irresistible
Funny, poignant and beautifully observed
Straub writes beautifully and amusingly . . . hard to beat for sheer charm and gentle wit * Daily Mail *
Smart and entertaining * Stylist *
Hugely talented . . . intelligent holiday reading
Warm and big-hearted . . . leaves you smiling for days * bestselling author of Where'd You Go, Bernadette *
Straub writes with such verve and sympathetic understanding of her characters . . . Reading this novel has all the pleasures of reading one of Anne Tyler's compelling family portraits * New York Times *
A funny and insightful look at love and relationships * Good Housekeeping *
Written with true warmth and wit * Bella *
A smart, cool sensibility * Elle *
Lovely, satisfying
Smart and fresh, offering new insights into the lives of people all around us * Brooklyn Magazine *
Thoughtful and hilarious * Real Simple *
It would be easy to compare Straub to other masters of the genre like Meg Wolitzer or Jennifer Egan, but she's already a master in her own right * The Millions *
Wise and often hilarious * Buzzfeed *
Readers will devour this witty and warmly satisfying novel * Publishers Weekly *
A precise and observant writer whose supple prose carries the story along without a snag. Straub's characters are a quirky and interesting bunch . . . it's a pleasure spending time with them * Kirkus *
Devilishly observed * Booklist *
Sprinkled with humour and insight * Library Journal *
Straub is consistently excellent * Book Riot *

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