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Authors: Amy Sue Nathan

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She would also let Nicole reorganize the kitchen. Again.

Organized or not, making handprints on the pillowcase was something Evie never forgot—not even the first year she and Richard were divorced. She had gone to Beth’s without the kids, then fashioned a second night of Passover, makeshift seder, and dinner for three, with preschool Haggadahs, rotisserie chicken, frozen potato pancakes, and Bartons chocolate-covered raspberry-jelly rings that served as both a fruit and dessert.

“Is it time?” Sophie said.

“I guess it is,” Evie said. “Put a plastic cloth on the table.”

The kitchen crowd exchanged looks. Sophie opened a cabinet and bent to the floor, pulling out a plastic basket filled with art supplies. A rolled, stained vinyl cloth lay on top.

Evie walked to the dining room and returned with the Passover pillow and pulled it out of its case. She handed the pillow to Lisa, who wrapped her arms around it the way she did when she was sixteen, sitting on her bed and talking about boys. Evie wondered if she’d twirl her hair or tap her fingers, but Lisa just looked at her. Evie flattened the pillowcase and pointed to a few spots that would work. The handprints overlapped slightly, the design becoming abstract art, beautiful but unrecognizable. Evie took out a small, noisy plastic bag from the side drawer and revealed three small plastic paint bottles. This year she opted for metallic instead of primary, jewel tones, pastels, glitter, puffy, or iridescent.

“I want silver,” Sophie said.

“Do you want gold or copper, Sam?” Evie said.

“Gold.”

“It’s copper for Luca then.”

Nicole gasped.

“Do you not want him to have paint on his hands?” Evie asked. “I’ll make sure he doesn’t lick them.” Evie averted her eyes from Lisa and her parents and winked at Nicole.

“It’s not that,” Nicole said, her eyelids fluttering. “It’s fine. No, it’s perfect.”

It had been months—maybe years—since anything in the Glass home had been perfect. But Nicole was right.

Sam and Sophie both stuck out their palms, and Evie squeezed a glob of appropriate-color paint onto each one. The kids rubbed their hands together, coated their fingers, and pulled apart their hands with a thwack. Evie pointed to Sophie and to the pillowcase. Sophie placed her hands, counted aloud to ten, and pulled them off. Shirley turned on the water and waved Sophie to the sink. Sam followed suit.

Nicole held Luca facing Evie and gave her his right hand. Evie put the copper paint on three middle fingers. Nicole stared at Evie. So did Luca. She rubbed the paint on his hand and held open his fingers, guided them to the pillowcase, and pulled them off without a smudge. Luca’s palm print was solid, the fingers and thumb outlines sharp in some places and muted in others. Evie breathed deep.

“Good job,” she said.

Luca squirmed and smiled wide, exposing two top teeth, two bottom teeth, and a mouthful of saliva. Evie threw her head back and laughed, then out of the corner of her eye she watched Lisa examine the newfangled heirloom.

Evie changed her mental channel, rinsed the rest of the dishes one by one, and placed them on a patchwork of old kitchen towels. The sound of the water obliterated the voices behind her, but Evie daydreamed a modern Norman Rockwell scene. She looked straight ahead and out the window so as not to break the spell.
It is such a pretty picture.
Then she shut off the faucet and turned around, which is when she saw, and heard,
reality.

Laney was talking to Herb, her voice like a Charlie Brown adult’s. Evie’s parents sat at the table reading the newspaper, turning pages in time to Jocelyn’s and Jordyn’s slap of playing cards. Sophie’s head disappeared into the freezer. Peg held Luca, who had chocolate all over his face. Rex licked something off the table leg, then the floor, then himself. Nicole dug in her diaper bag and emerged holding questionable, crumpled baby wipes. Laney took them and threw them away. Beth organized Tupperware by size, color, and contents. From the living room, Alan hooted and hollered something about a home run, and Sam belched his rendition of “Take Me Out to the Ball Game.” Then Evie watched Lisa pop the last homemade macaroon into her mouth, without asking if her sister wanted it.

“Hey!” Evie joked. “That’s the one I wanted!”

Sandy belly-laughed. The sound was becoming familiar.

Evie turned away again, closed her eyes, and let the sounds of domestic chaos weave under and over her thoughts.
This is my normal
. She smiled, feeling warm and content, as though she were relaxing in front of a roaring fire with an old friend.

Or perhaps, with a new one.

 

Acknowledgments

C
OUNTLESS HANDS AND HEARTS HAVE
helped me reach today, but there are people I must mention by name, without whom my journey would not have been possible, or nearly as much fun.

Many thanks to Jason Yarn, my agent, for his insight and expertise, and for answering all my questions all the time. Boundless gratitude to Brenda Copeland, my St. Martin’s editor, whose enthusiasm for
The Glass Wives
and confidence in me not only humbled and challenged me, but transformed me from a writer into an author. Heartfelt thanks also go to Laura Chasen, editorial assistant extraordinaire, for paying close attention to every detail, for quelling my nerves, and for risking her life to hail me a cab.

My critique partners, Pamela Toler and Christina Gombar, spent years reading chapters as many times as I rewrote them without complaint and always with insight. My earliest readers may not recognize
The Glass Wives
as the manuscript they read, but make no mistake, their feedback was crucial. Then there are later readers, workshop companions, those who answered questions or offered extraordinary moral support. Julie Asregadoo, Jami Bernard and the Ducklings, Annmarie Lockhart, Linda Oltman, Rebecca Flowers, Debra Lynn Lazar, Tina Ann Forkner, Kelly O. Levinson, Holly Root, Keith Cronin, Kristine Asselin, Janna Qualman, Julie Wu, Jeff Gold, Magdalen Braden, Adrienne Kress, Priscille Sibley, Alice Davis, Kathy Calarco, Sandra Kring, Brenda Janowitz, Lori Nelson Spielman, Julie Kibler, Eric Schlanger, Fern Katz, and Manny Katz (even though all his ideas were somehow edited out).

I’ve made many friends through my Women’s Fiction Writers blog, the Women’s Fiction Writers Alliance, and The Debutante Ball, where Kerry Schafer, Dana Bate, Kelly Harms, and Susan Spann are my 2013 Deb sisters. The sense of community these writers has provided has been a blessing.

These amazing authors and editors taught me more about writing and publishing than can be found in any book: Erica Orloff, Steve Mills, Meg Waite Clayton, Randy Susan Meyers, Karen Dionne, the members of Backspace, and last but not least, Book Pregnant—my BPeeps—my tribe.

Renee San Giacomo lovingly handed me a shovel and told me to dig deeper. Whitney Finkelstein believed all this would happen long before anyone else, even me. My sister-friend, Judith Soslowsky, has read in between the lines of my life for thirty-three years and has always understood the work as well as the reward.

For the opportunity to come into the lives and hearts of readers—in the past, present, and future—I am forever grateful.

My parents’, Sarah and Michael Nathan’s, and my brother David Nathan’s unconditional love provided the foundation on which I have built my life (many times, in many places).

My wonderful children, Zachary and Chloe Gropper, have been enthusiastic about my writing career since that Sunday in 2006 when my first essay appeared in the
Chicago Tribune
and we filled the back of the car with newspapers. You are now both remarkable adults with whom I am honored to share this and every journey. I love you, and believe that for all three of us, the best is yet to come.

 

About the Author

AMY SUE NATHAN lives and writes near Chicago, where she hosts the popular blog Women’s Fiction Writers. She has published articles in
The Huffington Post,
the
Chicago Tribune
, and
The New York Times Online
, among many others. Amy is the proud mom of a son and a daughter in college, and a willing servant to two rambunctious rescued dogs. Learn more at
AmySueNathan.com
.

THE GLASS WIVES

by Amy Sue Nathan

About the Author


A Conversation with Amy Sue Nathan

Behind the Novel

• “What Doesn’t Kill You Makes You Stronger (and Will Certainly Make Its Way into Your Novel)”

An Original Essay by the Author

Keep On Reading


Recommended Reading


Reading Group Questions

For more reading group suggestions visit
www.readinggroupgold.com

ST. MARTIN’S GRIFFIN

A Conversation with Amy Sue Nathan

What started your writing career?

I wrote my first book when I was ten; it was a story about sisters, and my favorite Barbie dolls were the main characters. I’ve been writing ever since, even though a litany of desk jobs kept me pretty busy writing brochures, slide show copy (
actual
slides), and PR material for a small college. After the desk jobs came years as a stay-at-home mom. Then I started “mom-blogging” after my divorce. I wrote about my life, mostly, posts about dating after divorce and being the single mom of two kids who always needed to be in two places at the same time. The blog led to essays and columns published in print and online. Once, I overheard two women talking about an essay in the
Chicago Tribune
. My essay! Lucky for me, they were saying nice things. It was then I knew I wanted to continue pursuing publication and sparking conversations. Then one day, while struggling through an essay, a workshop instructor encouraged me to write fiction. I remembered the days of Barbie stories and wondered why it had taken me so long to go back to what I loved to do.

“It was important to me to show … there are many ways to be a family.”

You mentioned a “workshop instructor.” Did you take writing workshops to hone your craft?

I did! Lots of workshops. I’m deadline driven, so the structure of lessons and homework kept me accountable and moving forward with my novel and other writing projects.

How did you come up with the idea for your novel?

Truth was the springboard for
The Glass Wives
. My ex-husband died just a few years after we divorced. Things were bad. Very bad. But then, as time passed, I thought—what if things could be worse? That was the start of my novel. I took my nugget of truth as a divorced mom with a deceased ex-husband and imagined the myriad ways things could have been worse. What would have to happen? What kind of people would be involved? What would these people do? The widow moving in with the ex-wife topped the list. Once I had the premise, well, things took off from there.

Your book was inspired by a true story. Is anyone in your novel based on a real person?

No, but Rex the dog is based on our first Golden Retriever, Einstein, who was both a genius and a big galumph.

Writers often want to convey a particular point of view as well as tell a story. Was that true for you?

You bet. It was important to me to give a voice to single moms, to explore an unconventional family in a conventional community, and show there are many ways to be a family. Just like for some of my characters, my life did not turn out as I’d planned. As I wrote
The Glass Wives,
I learned along with Evie that things could turn out okay despite being thrown off-track a time or two. Or ten.

How did you choose your characters’ names? What about the last name, Glass?

In thinking of a last name for my characters, I knew a few things: I wanted it to be short, Jewish, but not overtly ethnic. I researched Jewish surnames and came up with Glass. It wasn’t until afterwards that I realized the additional connotations.

I always loved the name Evie, but I pronounce it EH-vie, so I wasn’t sure it was the right choice since most people I know said EE-vie. But when I changed the name to Tracy, and then to Lisa, the names just didn’t fit (although I used Lisa for another character). I realized I was writing Evie’s story, no matter how someone pronounced it. Beth was one of my favorite names growing up, one I always named my dolls, and so that was an easy choice. Laney picked her own name, and if you’ve read
The Glass Wives,
that won’t surprise you.

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