Reviews for I'm glad about you

Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

"You never get over your first love" seems to be the premise of this novel, which follows volatile high school sweethearts -Alison and Kyle after they break up for the last time. Alison makes a beeline from the Midwest to New York City, determined to become a serious actress. Kyle, who had stubbornly clung to his Catholic virginity despite years of torment with Alison, sheds it without hesitation with the first woman to throw herself at him. Within months, he's married and locked in a loveless relationship. Meanwhile, Alison lands a plum acting role. But not all is rosy as she's faced with her own set of choices that similarly strain her integrity. Trips home for holidays give the two opportunities to cross paths, but it's one miss after another. Add in -Dennis, a creepy hometown "friend" and the result is uneven. Kyle is supposed to be spiritual and wholesome, but mostly he's cold and vindictive. VERDICT In her third novel (after Twelve Rooms with a View), Rebeck is strongest when portraying Alison's experiences in Hollywood after she's discovered in New York, no surprise given her screenwriting credentials as the creator of the television series Smash. [See Prepub Alert, 9/21/15.]-Christine -Perkins, Whatcom Cty. Lib. Syst., Bellingham, WA © Copyright 2016. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Like Nick Hornby and David Nicholls, Rebeck possesses an effortless prose style that edifies as much as it entertains. In her third novel (after Twelve Rooms with a View, 2010) and fresh off her stint as the creator of the now-canceled TV series Smash, Rebeck presents a tender comic novel about the years-long love affair between aspiring actress Alison and pediatrician Kyle. The two midwesterners fall in love in high school though Kyle's Catholic faith plays a major part in keeping them chaste. That combined with Alison's overweening ambition to make it big in New York City conspire to break the couple up, though they keep getting back together until a spectacular fight finally severs their bond for good. Now Alison has landed a major part in a TV series, and Kyle, brokenhearted, marries a beautiful blonde and joins a pediatric practice. When the two finally meet face-to-face during a Christmas party, their unassailable attraction gives them both pause and causes a rift in Kyle's marriage. Rebeck delivers some hilarious riffs on the venal nature of show business, even as she also imparts some hard truths on the need for compromise in relationships.--Wilkinson, Joanne Copyright 2016 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A rare honest story about love, ambition, and compromise. "But what is a demimonde, anyway?" asks Alison Moore in the opening line of this novel by Rebeck, the creator of TV's Smash and a widely produced playwright. Rebeck's insider knowledge of the demimonde of entertainment and celebrity is put to excellent use as she tracks the upward trajectory of a young actress from Cincinnati, from cattle-call auditions for a two-line role through a lead in a television series and to the brink of Hollywood superstardom. Every type in showbiz is unmasked here, from the writer"It's only two lines but there has to be stakes"to the columnist"Hi Jessica, you look fantastic! Can I grab you for a few minutes to talk about your know-nothing role as a gun-toting whore in Evil Dead 12?"to the actress herself, "light-headed with hunger all the time" on the orders of her agent: "Beautiful food is for you to look at, and other people to eat." While her stock goes up careerwise, Alison's personal life is in free-fall. The decision to move to New York abruptly ended her relationship with her high school sweetheart, Kyle, and their inability to recover ends up warping both of their lives. An idealistic doctor and a committed Catholic, shellshocked Kyle ends up in a pediatric practice catering to entitled suburbanites and, worse, married to a woman he doesn't love. Every time Alison comes home for a visit, they run into each other and bad things happen. Though she's something of a black sheep in her extended family, where grandchildren Nos. 24 and 25 are on the way, Alison identifies deeply with the Midwest itself, its culture, its values, its nice people with good manners. Even the parties are better, in her opinion. The snappy dialogue and plot you'd expect from a veteran dramatist plus the rich exploration of character that novels are made for. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Back