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Lydia's Party
Lydia's Party
Lydia's Party
Audiobook7 hours

Lydia's Party

Written by Margaret Hawkins

Narrated by Marguerite Gavin

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

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About this audiobook

Lydia is having a party-it's a party she hosts every year for six women friends who treasure the midwinter bash. Over a table laden with a feast of food and wine, the women revel in sharing newsy updates, simmering secrets, and laughter. As this particular evening unfolds, Lydia prepares to make a shattering announcement.



As we follow these friends through their party preparations, we meet flawed but lovable characters who are navigating the hassles of daily chores while also meditating in stolen moments on their lives, their regrets, their complicated relationships, and their deepest desires. When Lydia's announcement shocks them all, they rediscover the enduring bonds of friendship and find their lives changing in unexpected ways.



Tender, wryly funny, and exquisitely written, Lydia's Party poignantly considers both the challenges of everyday life and of facing our fears while creating characters whose foibles and feistiness will capture listeners' hearts.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 22, 2014
ISBN9781494572365
Lydia's Party

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Reviews for Lydia's Party

Rating: 3.4571428114285716 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

35 ratings12 reviews

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  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    A woman comes to terms with the fact she has six weeks to live and plans to tell her friends at their annual party! Didn't seem like the group of women were that close to me and I really didn't care about any of them! The book didn't really flow well either!
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This is a story of life-long friendships among a group of seven women. Some of the bonds remain strong; others less so, but they gather each year for Lydia's bleak midwinter dinner party. And this year, Lydia has some important news to reveal. I enjoyed the examination of friendships and their complexities. Some of the characters remained a bit under-developed. The ending was unsatisfying. Kind of mixed bag for me.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Lydia's Party by Margaret Hawkins is a bittersweet and melancholy novel about the intricate bonds of longtime friendship. A yearly gathering of former co-workers turned friends, this year's Bleak Winter Bash will forever change their lives and ultimately, their friendship.

    As Lydia prepares to host this year's gathering, she is very contemplative about the friendships that have endured for close to twenty years. She is also very reflective as she thinks back on her various relationships and her career decisions. While Lydia is content with some decisions, she is regretful for others and clearly sees where she might have done things differently.

    Interspersed with Lydia's musings are chapters written from some of her guests' perspectives as they prepare for the upcoming party. All but Lydia have moved on from the community college where they originally met. They are an eclectic blend of happily married, divorced and single women who have found various degrees of personal and professional success. But overall, they, too, suffer from different levels of dissatisfaction about how their lives have turned out.

    The characters are well-developed and their honesty about their lives and their friendships is refreshing. While I was not able to relate to the women's situations or their regrets, their life lessons are interesting and thought-provoking. The story begins strongly but it eventually becomes bogged down in superfluous details that seem to add little to the developing plot. However the end of the novel is fast paced and the growth of the characters is quite impressive.

    Lydia's Party by Margaret Hawkins is a moving novel of friendship and loss, and it is a timely reminder to live life to its fullest. It is a little sad, but it is also uplifting as each of the women emerges from tragedy a little bit stronger. All in all, a worthwhile read that explores the bonds of friendship.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Lydia’s Party is an absorbing story of a woman’s relationships during a time of high stress. Lydia’s had a post-Christmas party for female friends for about 17 years. The party is a time for them to relax and catch up on each other’s lives, give and take advice, and support each other. The years have brought them really close. This year there’s a surprise at the party that will change all their lives. I recommend reading this book, I found it gripping. 5 *
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I received an ARC.
    ---

    To be honest, this book was much different than I thought it would be. The story didn't live up to my expectations per say.

    The characters... most of the friends of Lydia are so forgettable and bland that I had to keep flipping back to the front just to remember specific details about them. Honestly, there were too many characters introduced at once and only like half of them got to tell their story through their POV, like Ceila and Norris. The story was definitely on the slow and dull side, where it didn't really pick up until near the end.

    How the story is told differs quite a bit between the first part of the book, compared to the rest of the book. Where it goes from talking about Lydia and her friends are preparing for Lydia's annual party, into Lydia's reveal and a few of her friends' reactions.

    The ending...hmmm... it's not really my cup of tea. It's sort of OK, now what? And really? Is this where the story is heading?

    Maybe this type of story just isn't for me.

    Overall, it's an OK read. Just really dull and somewhat one dimensional.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Margaret Hawkins is an internet friend, we have never met, but we do correspond. I enjoyed her previous novels, especially Year of Cats and Dogs, so I was nervous about her next novel. I never realized how hard it can be to approach the work of a friend for the purpose of a review. Well, now I can breathe a sigh of relief. Lydia’s Party is a wonderful story that – at first – brought to mind Virginia Woolf’s great novel, Mrs. Dalloway. However, I quickly began to realize that the similarity of plots ended with the planning of the dinner party for a circle of friends.Lydia’s Party delves into the mind of a woman who annually schedules a dinner party around the Christmas season for her friends – women only, no men; although on occasion, a husband slithers in to crash the festivities. Recently, attendance has fallen, but Lydia hopes all seven will attend, as she has an announcement to make to her friends. The weather becomes a factor, but all show up as planned.Hawkins’ description of the characters as she maneuvers around her house on the day of the party is spectacular. She reveals much of the history of the group, as well as some thoughts she has about the women and their husbands and lovers. Interspersed are chapters by the guests as they scurry around gathering what they have volunteered to bring.Early in the novel, when the guest list is by no means certain, Hawkins writes, “Lydia went back to her mental guest list: Elaine, Celia, Maura, Jayne, and Betsy. Maybe Norris. Lydia was the only one still teaching. […] Elaine, that cagey devil, had gotten out fifteen years earlier, saved up to pay off her mortgage and gave her notice the day she wrote the last check. She said she couldn’t stand teaching anymore, couldn’t stand the tedium of hearing her own voice repeating itself semester after semester, telling the same jokes and the same stories, acting out the same rehearsed epiphanies, year after year, and Lydia knew what she meant, felt the same way about her own tired performances. Though Lydia thought that in Elaine’s case it was grading papers that finally did her in. Four sections of English composition every semester – she’d felt she had to correct every superfluous comma” (21). These sentiments certainly clang as true as a giant brass bell.Lydia has a beloved pet, Maxine, a large dog. The scenes with Maxine had a touching seriousness and humor that nearly brought tears to my eyes. Maxine is “aging gracefully.” and so is our beloved Marcy. While cooking, Maxine joins Lydia in the kitchen. “Lydia began to form the dough into little oblongs and set them on a plate. She felt a hot breath on her leg and looked down. Maxine was sitting next to her, still as a statue, her intelligent eyes following the movement of Lydia’s hands from the bowl to the plate, watching the dough in its progress away from her. She had already forgotten the gift of cheese and now she wanted dough. She was patient, strategic. She knew the formed dumplings on the plate were not for her but she also knew that Lydia was genetically predestined to be a patsy and that her best chance lay in what was left in the bowl, an amount that was steadily decreasing. // Lydia knew that Maxine knew this because Lydia could read her mind, her eyes, her body, the anxious tilt of her shoulders, her tense ears as she calculated what she might get of what was left” (55). Every dog lover knows this scene – or they should – and the warm fuzzies it brings to the surface.Margaret Hawkins’ Lydia’s Party might be considered “chick lit,” but the humanity, the emotions, the love, the tenderness, the friendship, and loyalty are way too evident and universal to confine this wonderful novel to any single niche. Never maudlin, always thoughtful, Lydia is a character anyone can love. And, while I hated the story to end, I wasn’t sad, because I felt as if I had made a new friend in Lydia. A friend who will stay with me for a long, long time. 5 stars.--Jim, 2/21/15
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    really disapppointment.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I found this book really drawn out, unnecessarily. I thought the mid winter party a good idea, I loved the cover.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really liked this book---all the parts about growing older -- especially Lydia's analysis of life, early in the book, were so nicely expressed by the author---presenting lots of things we probably all think about. And the women---what an interesting collection of "friends," showing how relationships go through ups and downs for all kinds of different reasons. Loved Lydia's relationship with Maxine, her dog.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    A woman comes to terms with the fact she has six weeks to live and plans to tell her friends at their annual party! Didn't seem like the group of women were that close to me and I really didn't care about any of them! The book didn't really flow well either!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A Bleak Midwinter Bash might make for rather bleak reading, but Margaret Hawkins delivers something simultaneously deeper and lighter in her novel, Lydia’s Party. Surface details entertain as the perfect casserole is prepared in a brand new post, but mystery lies behind why careful Lydia is suddenly investing in something so expensive. Perfect clothes are laid out. A perfect table is laid. Meanwhile the (not quite) perfect guests, who always turn up, every year for the last 13 years, make their own preparations with varying levels of reluctant duty, disappointment, promise and hope.This is a women-only party, and these women, held together by having met 20 years ago in a small suburban art class, might be close friends but they’re very different in outlook from each other. Their maybe-tomorrows have all turned into missed-chances with passing years—except for Norris, who surely has it all. As thelist of things to look forward to shrinks, the certain age of these protagonists makes them particularly appealing to readers of a certain age, who will quickly identify with their quirks and regrets. But there’s joy in this bleakness, always lightened by humor and the mysteries of reality—those secrets we barely confess to ourselves and surely not to others. There will be a party. There will be fun. And it might not be the last time.Each character brings different strengths and weaknesses to both party and narration. Extrapolating the truths between them is part of the fun of reading this deceptively involving novel. Relationships come into vivid focus with one long-delayed revelation, and a snowstorm of emotions ensues. But there are twists and surprises still in store, beautiful works of art to explore, and curious touches of winter sun breaking through before another Bleak Midwinter Bash. Hauntingly real, evocatively human, deeply perceptive, and intriguingly delivered, Lydia’s Party would be a great book club read. It’s a wonderful tale for women readers, and a marvelous invitation to see into the art inside and outside our heads.Disclaimer: A friend loaned me her copy of this book to see what I thought of it, and I loved it.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This was a thoughtful, gentle story that was well told. Very enjoyable.