Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Refreshing blend of humor and intellect in novel Review: The Inn at Lake Devine is the first novel I have read by Lipman. I purchased and started the novel yesterday, and have almost finished it already. The novel begins with a 12 year old Natalie who is quite curious and indigant about Mrs. Ingrid Berry, who demonstrates "genteel Anti-Semitism" in the 1960s New England. After a week's vacation at Lake Devine with a camp friend, Natalie assumed her curiousity and fixation had ended. however, the novel picks up ten years later. I thought it was a brilliant concept which was not explained on the back of the book. Natalie is a growing and evolving character, like the other key actors in the story. It can be difficult to understand Natalie's condoning attitude toward the Berry family regarding Mrs. Berry's prejudice, but I was charmed by Kris and Nelson, amused by Gretel. Using the 1964 Civil Rights Act was a nice touch. Lipman's writing not only strikes the right tone between (sometimes mock)seriousness and humor, and the plot was interesting enough for me to plow through the majority of the book in two days. I am very picky about fiction novels, and became aware of the novel through a search on amazon.com - since I enjoyed Elizabeth Berg's writing, this novel was recommended to me. I am absolutely NOT disappointed.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Really, really cute Review: Calling Elinor Lipman's work "cute" is a bit of injustice, but that's just how I felt about this book. After reading this, I felt the same way I feel coming out of a great romantic comedy movie, all warm and fuzzy inside.The book follows Natalie Marx who becomes intrigued/obsessed with an Inn who, when she was a child, did not allow her family to vist because they were Jewish. Natalie whowever, manages to find a way into the Inn through non-Jewish friends, and her commentary about the Inn and it's visitors, and the family who graciously allows her to vacation with them is hilarious. (And the gentile hottie Natalie becomes involved with is a pretty cool storyline too). The back of this book contains a quote from the Chicago Tribune calling it a "punchy little comedy of manners. . .Think Jane Austen" and although way too many female authors get compared to "modern-day Jane Austens" this description actually fits. I highly recommend this book.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Self centred heroine slighty spoils things Review: Like most readers here, I love Lipmans stuff. This one was slightly marred for me though by the selfishness of the central character. I felt she was judgemental and a bit of a hypocrite. She made such a big deal about Gretel getting off with the deceased's brother, but when she herself was wooed at the Inn, it was all about romance, and in the best possible taste. While Gretel may have been an irritating person, she was in her own home, and Natalie was the visitor. I felt this quite a few times throughout the book! I thought it was actually a bit cheeky how the two couples so neatly inherited the Inn at the end (sorry, plot spoiler), and cheerfully put their parents out of business. If Natalie resented Ingrid so much, why didn't she just stay away from her? I enjoyed the book immensely but I've noticed Lipmans' heroines being selfish in other books too and it has really pi**ed me off! I suppose you just feel like stepping into the pages and giving them a good shake. And was it just me or was Linette such a sypmpathetic character because she wasn't particularly glamourous - and therefore posed no threat to Natalie? Just a thought.
Rating: ![2 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-2-0.gif) Summary: Fun but fluffy and unconvincing Review: This novel, which was recommended by the New Yorker as ideal summer reading, felt fluffy to me. The plot, which concerns the fascination of a young girl, later a young woman, with a quaint Vermont inn that excludes Jews, is promising. Having wormed her way in, the Jewish heroine contrasts the ways of these vanilla-flavored, plain cooking 1950s WASPs with those of her quirky, loving working-class family in Newton, Mass. (Or, Newton, Massajewsetts, as her not-so-welcoming hostess pronounces it--or so Natalie, who is rather prickly, imagines.) Ingrid Berry, the proprietor of the inn, never comes real; her mycologist husband, who is too gently bemused to understand the implications of the Inn's Gentiles-only policy, is better drawn. When the action moved to the Catskills and the Borscht-Belt scene, the book lost me. The author seems intent upon exploring the differences between Orthodox and Reform Jews, as well as Jews and Wasps, and it is all rather labored. She also takes a gratuitous swipe at Unitarian Universalists: No fair! The crisis in the story, which I won't give away, is melodramatic and unconvincing, and the ending has a contrived feel. So I give this about a B-. It's okay for hammock reading, but you can do better. Try Cold Mountain.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Elinor Lipman's done it again Review: I'm an Elinor Lipman fan but was disappointed by "Isabel's Bed," and didn't find the summary of "The Inn at Lake Devine" all that compelling. But I ended up reading this little trifle of a book in one sitting--laughing out loud on occasion. It's a great light read with some interesting points about society and prejudice, and a cute little love story you root for besides. My reservations are that the adult Robin isn't more developed, and the anti-Semitic innkeeper's views aren't explained in more depth. But maybe the latter is the point--many of these attitudes develop without people realizing them or recognizing that they're wrong.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: a great, quick, fun read! Review: I'm writing this from Southwest Florida where I am vacationing for the holidays. I read this book in a day as it is that easy, that "fun" and so easy to get into. The characters are well developed, the story line is a good one and the book instantly caught me by surprise. I had never read anything by this author but will do so now as I love her style. I found myself laughing out loud on occasion as I read this fine book and am sure you will, too. Read it, you will love it!
Rating: ![5 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-5-0.gif) Summary: Fabulous Review: I happened on this book while browsing Amazon. I couldn't put it down. Very light reading, but interesting. I ordered another book by this author as I love the way she writes. Her characters are fantastic and the stories intriguing. Super book!!
Rating: ![2 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-2-0.gif) Summary: Sorry I am not 17 anymore!! Review: THE INN AT LAKE DIVINE Well written novel, no loose ends although at times it seemed contrived and very obvious the writer was 'explaining' something. Would have liked Lipman to be more subtle as she justified/explained motivation and actions of characters. Loved the mushroom twist, well done and unexpected, also loved the episode when Natalie pretended to be the daughter of the murder and her reservation at the inn was accepted without question. Natalie was well developed as a character but the others seemed flat and one dimensional...some characters seemed to be inserted to fill the plot, relationships were unrealistic and seemed to lack emotion. Many characters were stereotyped...the Jewish mother, the kindly, but out of touch Mr. Berry, the cold, ridged Mrs Berry, etc. Mrs Marx was secretive then suddenly supportive of Natalie...people don't change that fast. Natalie was a passionate and interesting youth but as in her twenties she seemed flat, heavy and lacked sparkle, just pushed around by life. What happened to the youthful fire?? Some solutions to problems seemed pat at times, original at other times. Getting into the inn by way of the Fifes was original as was the engagement of Linnet to the Rabbi, and the mushrooms illness. The boyfriend of Linnet being so willing to break off the engagement and take the blame was just too "contrived". The ending was too pat...the anti-Semitic ones got their comeuppance as did Gretel and Skip. I can not imagine what it would be like to be refused entrance to a place due to my ethnic or religious background. It must be awful and deeply hurtful. The question must be asked: Do we look at the offence in the context of the times and forgive...it was common back then or do we hold people accountable and punish (loss of the Inn). I think it is hardest when the offence is in the recent past and the offenders are still alive. It may be just a tiny bit easier to forgive when the offence is further in the past. Does time heal? It seems that when the offence is more recent the offenders must suffer consequences: pregnant daughter, son marrying the undesirable Jew, loss of the family heritage Inn due to scandal and humiliation. Of course the consequences were light compared to the many hurts that had occurred due to the policy of discrimination. The writer was able to speak to the wrongs of descrimination and yet keep it fairly light. It think many lessons can be extrapolated from the story, especially for young people who may not be aware of the details of the past. Many know of descrimination against African Americans but many may not know of the antisemitic behavior that occurred in this country so recently. To sum it up, it is a great book if you: 1. Are 17 2. Have a box of bon bons 3. Don't have a date on a Saturday night For me the problem is: 1. Missed that age by a mile 2. Long ago ate all the bon bons 3. Saturday nights date is a distance memory. Good juvenile novel. I would recommend this book for young people 15 to 25 yrs old.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: Lighten up a little, folks Review: Just finished the book and took a look at many of the past reviews. I enjoyed the book tremendously but agreed with some of the comments that the last third of it was a bit disappointing, though I can understand why Natalie and the others wound up in the Catskills. What I don't understand is why so many readers wanted this book to be the be-all-and-end-all on anti-Semitism. This is clearly a comedy of manners, and at that it more than succeeds. It isn't meant to solve anything or explain everything. I think one of the points of the story is that Ingrid ISN'T a scary villain OR a Nazi -- she is what so many people are -- flawed and not very nice and not someone I'd want to spend any time with, but certainly not even a little Hitler in her own world. Maybe Catskill hotels didn't send out letters suggesting Gentiles weren't welcome, but there was always a sense of segregation there as well. And the anger that Natalie and Linette wind up with the Berry brothers -- and I didn't get any real sense that Nelson and Linette are headed for the altar any time soon -- puzzles me. It's a STORY; it isn't going to convince anyone to intermarry -- and if it can, the reader doesn't have very strong opinions to start with. I also didn't see any true and/or annoying Jewish stereotypes in the book -- but there are always going to be people who are going to look for ways to be insulted. Oh, and the notion that Orthodox parents would sit shiva if their daughter married a Reform rabbi struck me as a bit much. We are talking about the mid-1970s, not today; we are not talking about an ultra-Orthodox family. Just lighten up a little; it's only a book -- and an amusing one at that.
Rating: ![4 stars](http://www.reviewfocus.com/images/stars-4-0.gif) Summary: 'Inn' a keeper Review: Lipman lures you in with great character development and lighthearted story lines. One can't help but like Natalie - the main character, and the story had enough substance mixed with enjoyable fluff to keep me interested for the duration! If you are looking for an easy read with some substance, too - pick up 'Inn at Lake Devine' and enjoy.......
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