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Rating: Summary: Better than your usual popular fiction.... Review: As the sequel to "Class Reunion," I read this book long ago and was thrilled to recently find it and "Class Reunion" in hardback for my collection. Although I see that Amazon.com readers rate "Class Reunion" a better book, as I've read (and re-read) the two novels over the years I find that I now like "After the Reunion" better than its predecessor. You should read "Class Reunion" first and get to know (and care about) the characters, and then read "After the Reunion" -- it is truly a "feel good" read.Recently I found the two books in paperback and, since I've enjoyed them so, bought them for a friend (who up to now has read nothing but Nora Roberts!) to take on her annual camping vacation. She said she loved them so much that she changed her whole vacation routine and read the books from the time she got up until about 2:00 in the afternoon and picked them up again after dinner (her whole family accused her of being anti-social)! When I asked her which of the 2 books she liked better, she said "After the Reunion." I'm hopeful that people will not see the "average reader rating" for this book and choose not to read it, because they will be missing a wonderful story about four(+) characters the reader will truly care about.
Rating: Summary: Wonderful "Feel Good" Book Review: As the sequel to "Class Reunion," I read this book long ago and was thrilled to recently find it and "Class Reunion" in hardback for my collection. Although I see that Amazon.com readers rate "Class Reunion" a better book, as I've read (and re-read) the two novels over the years I find that I now like "After the Reunion" better than its predecessor. You should read "Class Reunion" first and get to know (and care about) the characters, and then read "After the Reunion" -- it is truly a "feel good" read. Recently I found the two books in paperback and, since I've enjoyed them so, bought them for a friend (who up to now has read nothing but Nora Roberts!) to take on her annual camping vacation. She said she loved them so much that she changed her whole vacation routine and read the books from the time she got up until about 2:00 in the afternoon and picked them up again after dinner (her whole family accused her of being anti-social)! When I asked her which of the 2 books she liked better, she said "After the Reunion." I'm hopeful that people will not see the "average reader rating" for this book and choose not to read it, because they will be missing a wonderful story about four(+) characters the reader will truly care about.
Rating: Summary: Better than your usual popular fiction.... Review: I do not read much in the way of "popular fiction" (Danielle Steel, Nora Roberts, Jackie Collins, etc.), but I read "Class Reunion" by Rona Jaffe when I was a teenager. Back then, of course, I was probably looking for the racy parts, but the characters stayed with me and I reread the book a number of times over the years. I was thrilled when "After the Reunion" was published, and read it immediately. And now, when I feel like revisiting familiar characters ("comfort reading," I call it), I reread "After the Reunion" rather than "Class Reunion." I like the way the characters learn to take charge of their lives in so-called middle age, and escape their rigid 1950s upbringings. They show that it's never too late to change your life for the better! I also like that we get details on the next generation as well, specifically Annabelle's daughter Emma and Emily's daughter Kit. Annabelle and Chris, however, remain my favorite characters throughout both books. If you are looking for involving fiction that follows several characters, pick up both these books. Definitely read "Class Reunion" first, but don't forget "After the Reunion" as well.
Rating: Summary: full circle Review: I enjoyed this book just as much as Class Reunion. In fact, Class Reunion should have just been one big book. This book brings things full circle. The girls meet up again and become actual friends as they had started out as in Class Reunion. At the end, I kept wanting more pages b/c I wanted to know what happened to them. (I'd convinced myself on the last page that I saw more text and was disappointed when there wasn't more!) Everyone's "second" life seemed to be working for them and they seemed to be happy. It's kind of like they fell into something wonderful instead of going towards something that they were "supposed" to want. This books makes me seriously think about the things I want in my own life.
Rating: Summary: full circle Review: I enjoyed this book just as much as Class Reunion. In fact, Class Reunion should have just been one big book. This book brings things full circle. The girls meet up again and become actual friends as they had started out as in Class Reunion. At the end, I kept wanting more pages b/c I wanted to know what happened to them. (I'd convinced myself on the last page that I saw more text and was disappointed when there wasn't more!) Everyone's "second" life seemed to be working for them and they seemed to be happy. It's kind of like they fell into something wonderful instead of going towards something that they were "supposed" to want. This books makes me seriously think about the things I want in my own life.
Rating: Summary: it was not the best Review: I thought is was kind of boring and it did not really keep my interes
Rating: Summary: Good Sequel Review: In the early eighties I read Jaffe`s "Class Reunion", my third Jaffe novel. It was translated into German and I was lucky to find it in hardcover before it came out in paperback. At the university library I made some research on Rona Jaffe books(remember those were the pre-Internet days) and found out there is a sequel to "Class Reunion" - of course I was thrilled and wanted to know how the story goes on. [...]BR>Not having any experience so far with reading American novels in English I ordered the paperback issue of "After the Reunion" in English and got it after 8 weeks. Spent the whole summer with this novel looking up about twenty words per page, but I succeeded and at the end I had the feeling, it was worth the effort. I definitely couldn`t understand why Rowohlt didn`t find this novel worth to be translated into German. [...].BR>There`s only one other American novelist that I can recommend as highly as Rona Jaffe, and that`s Nancy Thayer. Both have written some of the best novels for women over the last 20 years. I wish there would be a TV mini series on "Class Reunion" and "After the Reunion".
Rating: Summary: Continuing the Saga Review: This book continues the stories of the four Harvard/Radcliffe graduates of the '50s. However, it isn't quite as gripping plotwise, as the original "Class Reunion". I don't want to give the plot away, because it is just fascinating how they all end up. However, the ending seemed incomplete in that not everyone's life was tied up and set. I think that Rona should have a third sequal which takes the four college graduates into menopause. In her later books, Road Taken, and Room-Mating season, she certainly takes her characters into old-age! But, this is definitely one of the better Rona Jaffe novels, and absolutely required once you finish "Class Reunion".
Rating: Summary: Continuing the Saga Review: This book continues the stories of the four Harvard/Radcliffe graduates of the '50s. However, it isn't quite as gripping plotwise, as the original "Class Reunion". I don't want to give the plot away, because it is just fascinating how they all end up. However, the ending seemed incomplete in that not everyone's life was tied up and set. I think that Rona should have a third sequal which takes the four college graduates into menopause. In her later books, Road Taken, and Room-Mating season, she certainly takes her characters into old-age! But, this is definitely one of the better Rona Jaffe novels, and absolutely required once you finish "Class Reunion".
Rating: Summary: Continuing the Saga Review: This book continues the stories of the four Harvard/Radcliffe graduates of the '50s. However, it isn't quite as gripping plotwise, as the original "Class Reunion". I don't want to give the plot away, because it is just fascinating how they all end up. However, the ending seemed incomplete in that not everyone's life was tied up and set. I think that Rona should have a third sequal which takes the four college graduates into menopause. In her later books, Road Taken, and Room-Mating season, she certainly takes her characters into old-age! But, this is definitely one of the better Rona Jaffe novels, and absolutely required once you finish "Class Reunion".
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