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Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan: A Novel Kindle Edition
Paula Marantz Cohen's triumphant first novel, Jane Austen in Boca, was an inspired blend of classic English literature and modern American manners. Her new novel heads north to the seemingly quiet suburban town of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, for a comedy that even Shakespeare couldn't have imagined.
Carla Goodman is worried. Her husband, a gastroenterologist in private practice, is coming home frazzled because medicine isn't what it used to be. Her son's teachers want to put him on Ritalin to stop him from wreaking havoc on the fifth grade. And her cranky twelve-year-old daughter has a bas mitzvah coming up.
But it's Carla's sweet, widowed mother, Jessie Kaplan, who really has her baffled. Jessie has suddenly "remembered" that she was Shakespeare's girlfriend---the Dark Lady of the sonnets---in a previous life. Can even the famed Dr. Leonard Samuels, psychiatrist and author of the self-help book How I Stopped Worrying and Learned to Love My Mother-in-Law, help with problems like these?
Witty, engaging, and wickedly observant, Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan is an unpredictable tale of love, loss, and family rites of passage.
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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From the Back Cover
"Page-turner of the week...Austen never shmoozed by the pool with a pack of bronzed yentas, but her PRIDE plot proves as durable as ever...What's not to like?"
--People Magazine
"Utterly charming...think Pride and Prejudice, but with better weather."--Vanity Fair
"Cohen's wit is sharp, smart and satirical, and her characterizations are vividly on target."
--San Francisco Chronicle
About the Author
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
Chapter OneThis one LOOKS NICE.""I hate it!""How about this one?""No!"Carla and Stephanie were leafing through a sample book in the fancy stationery store, trying to pick out an invitation for Stephanie's bat mitzvah.Things were not going well.What Carla liked, Stephanie hated, and what Stephanie liked, Carla couldn't help saying, "Are you sure that's what you want?"--a question guaranteed to drive any daughter crazy.Carla hadn't thought that picking out an invitation would be so complicated. How hard could it be to choose a good paper stock with a colored border and some curly type?But she had failed to take several things into account.For one thing, invitations were not as simple as they used to be. Now, not only was there a dizzying array of paper stocks, borders, and typescripts to consider, but ornamental features like gold leaf, ribbons, and stars; whimsical inserts like confetti, whistles, and gold coins; and high-concept design elements like holograms, taped messages, and scratch-and-sniff panels.Then, there was the additional complication posed by the bat mitzvah girl herself. Stephanie Goodman was at that highly sensitive and volatile age where choices of any kind tended to stress her out. The many trivial, hard-to-differentiate variables involved in picking out a bat mitzvah invitation were just the sort of thing liable to cause a meltdown."What's wrong with this one?" Carla held up a sample invitation with a pink border and a matching pink bow. A little packet of pink sparkles was also included as a "fun feature"--guaranteed to spray out when the envelope was opened, get embedded in the recipient's sweater, and remain there through numerous dry cleanings."Too girly," pronounced Stephanie."And what's wrong with girly?" asked Carla, succumbing to sarcasm: "You're a girl, aren't you?" In point of fact, Stephanie and her friends liked to advertise their gender--what with the makeup, the tight-fitting tops, and the heavy dousings of cheap perfume that, in the words of Carla's husband, Mark, made the car (when he drove them to their favored destinations, Friendly's and Starbucks) smell like a French cathouse. Yet for some reason, certain tried-and-true artifacts of girlhood had been thrown by the wayside. The color pink was one of them."I like the turquoise," said Stephanie, ignoring her mother's remark (in Stephanie's world, mothers weren't allowed to be sarcastic)."That's nice." Carla tried to sound noncommittal."You don't like it!""The turquoise is fine.""You're lying! You don't like it!""What does it matter what I like? It's what you like that counts.""I don't like the turquoise," said Stephanie with sudden decisiveness. "I like this one." She pointed to an invitation with pinkish trim and a pinkish bow, similar to the one Carla had just picked out."Lavender is very popular," said the salesgirl diplomatically."Yes," said Stephanie, glad to see her choice--in actuality pink--identified as not pink. "I like the lavender.""So that settles it," said Carla with relief."Lisa's invitation had her voice recorded in it," Stephanie noted, not content to close the case so easily."We have speaking invitations," said the salesgirl. "They're really neat."Carla felt like swatting the girl, whose skin-tight jeans and heavy eyeliner--not to mention the fact that she wasn't a day over twenty-three--obviously gave her an unfair advantage. "No speaking invitations," she said firmly. "Everyone we plan to invite knows how to read.""I was just asking!" said Stephanie. "I wasn't necessarily saying I had to have them.""Well, you aren't going to.""I didn't say I wanted them. I was just asking." Stephanie's voice had grown shrill but she managed to mutter under her breath, "You're so mean! I hate you!"Carla held herself back from responding. All the books said that the teenagers' goal was to get the parents angry and on the defensive. It was important not to let them win--or at least know they had. Carla pursed her lips and handed the salesgirl her credit card."Do you have a ballpark figure of how many you plan to send out?" asked the salesgirl sweetly.Carla sighed and shook her head. The original plan had been for a modest brunch--the modest brunch being the common starting point for all bar and bat mitzvahs, though none ever seemed to take this form. In the Goodmans' case, the brunch had been nixed by Mark's parents, who had argued that they and their friends weren't about to schlep up from Florida to have the event over on Saturday afternoon. Better to do an evening affair, with a nice spread for the out-of-towners the next morning to stretch things out.Once an evening affair was settled on, other variables followed in inevitable succession: a sit-down meal, a band as well as a deejay, a prima-donna entertainment coordinator with entertainment facilitators in matching outfits--not to mention high-end favors, prizes, and other specialty items that the bar mitzvah marketers stipulated as de rigueur for evening affairs."It takes on a life of its own," said Carla's friend Jill Rosenberg, who was still recuperating from her son Josh's bar mitzvah a year ago. "But you don't want to fight it. If you resist, they make you feel guilty, so it's better to give in and go with the flow."Carla had taken Jill's advice and watched unprotestingly as the guest list grew and grew. Stephanie's list alone drew from three substantial constituencies: her camp friends, her middle-school friends, and her Hebrew-school friends--each group to be treated as inviolable and not to be mixed under any circumstances.Mark's list was also substantial. He had to invite all the referring doctors in his hospital (or risk never getting a referral again) and those nurses who had dropped hints as to how they'd love to observe this wonderful Jewish ritual (or risk their developing weird scenarios as to what went on when so many Jews got together in one place).Carla's mother, Jessie, planned to invite large contingents from both sides of her family. This included the highly sensitive Scarsdale Lubenthals--to omit one was to bring down the ire of the entire clan--and the lively but disreputable Brooklyn Katzes, likely to show up with new spouses, a doubling effect in itself.Carla's in-laws seemed intent on inviting practically everyone in their condominium community in Southeast Florida, including people they frankly detested."Invite them," her mother-in-law said. "They won't come anyway and it'll make them feel bad for not inviting us to their grandchildren's.""But what if they do come?" Carla protested. She had learned from friends that people were unpredictable that way and you neverknew when someone might be in the mood to hop on a plane and go to a bat mitzvah. Just the other day she had heard a horror story about a woman who invited her husband's cousins in Venezuela, and had them all show up on her doorstep the morning of the affair."If they come, you add a few more tables," her mother-in-law counseled lightly. Carla's in-laws were always making such casual pronouncements, until they saw the bill and were appalled. Carla thought they might be suffering from a rare form of Alzheimer's in which their memory was affected only with regard to what things cost.Finally, there was the associative principle attached to the invitations. This was the principle whereby asking X meant having to ask Y and Z, who would be mortally offended if they found that X was invited and they weren't. In short, each invitee immediately spawned two or three more, making compiling the guest list akin to the breeding of rabbits."How about a five-hundred-dollar down payment?" said the salesgirl, noting that Carla's eyes had glazed over at the prospect of giving an estimate. "We can make up the difference when you have the exact count."Carla said this would be fine."And if you need to change any of the options, we'd be more than happy to accommodate. It's such an important event; we want the bat mitzvah girl to have everything she wants."The salesgirl glanced slyly at Stephanie and her mother as she spoke. She was close enough to her own bat mitzvah to know that what the bat mitzvah girl wants wasn't always in line with what the mother of the bat mitzvah girl thinks is appropriate. The prospect of a clash of wills filled the air as she saw Carla and Stephanie dart angry looks at each other. It was nice to think that certain things remained the same, mused the salesgirl. Even as you grew older and the world changed around you, others followed in your footsteps and repeated the age-old patterns. That's what rituals were all about, weren't they?MUCH ADO ABOUT JESSIE KAPLAN. Copyright © 2004 by Paula Marantz Cohen. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address St. Martin's Press, 175 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10010.
Product details
- ASIN : B003JTHJRQ
- Publisher : St. Martin's Press; First edition (April 1, 2007)
- Publication date : April 1, 2007
- Language : English
- File size : 928 KB
- Text-to-Speech : Enabled
- Screen Reader : Supported
- Enhanced typesetting : Enabled
- X-Ray : Not Enabled
- Word Wise : Enabled
- Print length : 292 pages
- Best Sellers Rank: #2,468,173 in Kindle Store (See Top 100 in Kindle Store)
- #1,397 in Women's Religious Fiction
- #1,905 in Doctors & Medicine Humor
- #1,974 in Adaptations & Pastiche Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Paula Marantz Cohen is Dean of the Pennoni Honors College and Distinguished Professor of English at Drexel University. She is the recipient of the Lindback Award for Distinguished Teaching and is a co-editor of jml: Journal of Modern Literature. She is also the host of The Drexel InterView, a TV show based in Philadelphia that is broadcast on over 350 stations, including 150 PBS stations, throughout the country.
Cohen is the author of five nonfiction books and six novels, and is the producer of the documentary film, Two Universities and the Future of China. Her play, The Triangle, about John Singer Sargent, Henry James, and Edith Wharton, was a finalist in the Julie Harris Playwriting Competition. Her essays, stories, and reviews have appeared in The Yale Review, The American Scholar, The Southwest Review, the Times Literary Supplement, Raritan, The Chronicle of Higher Education, the Wall Street Journal, and other publications. Her weekly online column, "Class Notes," appeared in The American Scholar (and is still on the website: theAmericanScholar.org).
Cohen holds a B.A. in French and English from Yale College and a Ph.D. in English Literature from Columbia University.
To learn more, visit www.paulamarantzcohen.net
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 5, 2009I'm a huge fan of Paula Marantz Cohen. I stumbled upon her first novel, Jane Austen in Boca, while browsing in the library, and I've been a fan ever since. For some reason, I missed the publication of her second novel, Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan, even though I read her most recent one, Jane Austen in Scarsdale: Or Love, Death, and the SATs.
Although it's hard to name a favorite, Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan is certainly in contention. It's the story of Carla, a stay-at-home busy planning her daughter's bat mitzvah, volunteering all over town, helping her husband with his struggling medical practice, and figuring out how to calm down her misbehaving ten-year-old son. To make matters more interesting, her mother, Jessie Kaplan, who lives with Carla and her family, suddenly remembers she was the Dark Lady, Shakespeare's mysterious girlfriend in a past life.
The plot is somewhat preposterous at first glance, but Paula Marantz Cohen's deft storytelling and rich character's made me root for the unbelievable. I laughed out loud more times than I can count, and yet, I was touched by each and every character, as they were all refreshingly realistic, yet rich and loveable. I found myself wishing I could go to Stephanie's bat mitzvah and chat with the family. Perhaps most amazingly, I learned an absurd amount about Shakespeare, Venice and Jews in the 1500s. Paula Marantz Cohen is the best kind of academic; she seamlessly blends history and literature with a modern, amusing, and touching story.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 28, 2010After enjoying Paula Cohen's first novel, "Jane Austen in Boca," I looked forward to reading "Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan." I was not disappointed, although I think I prefer Cohen's first. The author's absolute strong point, as evinced in both novels, is her ability to develop elderly characters of richness, complexity, and sympathy. So perhaps it may be that Jane Austen in Boca, set in a retirement community, simply contained more of what Cohen does best.
Jessie Kaplan, both the character and the novel, is a delight. Cohen deftly weaves several plots - the delusions of a seventyish grandmother who believes in a former life she was Shakespeare's girlfriend and the prototype of Jessica in The Merchant of Venice; the impending bat mitzvah of her granddaughter, Stephanie Goodman; and the romance between her daughter Margot and Stephanie's English teacher, Hal Pearson. All these come to a delightful head, first in a remarkable trip to Venice, then at the mashed potatoes sundae station and on the dance floor of Stephanie's bat mitzvah party.
Cohen, an English professor, has a deft way of weaving quotes, anachronistic words, and metaphors into the context of grand bourgeois Jewish suburbia. Underlying the comic aspects of the novel are serious questions about family relationships, appearance and reality, and the role literature plays in real life. Cohen also does a good job of explaining the significance of the bar mitzvah ritual underneath the glitz and glitter. As Dr. Leonard Samuels, Cherry Hill's favorite psychiatrist observes, "...in the end, it's a sacred ceremony of initiation and a hell of a party. What's not to like?"
What indeed?
- Reviewed in the United States on June 24, 2006************************SPOILER*********************************I loved this book. I didn't think I would like it because I usually read literary fiction. This book has a few characters, which makes this book, Much ado About Jessie Kaplan a fast easy read. Carla, the main character( mother), her son is distrupting the school and causing havoc, the daughter about to become a bat mitzvah, and can't pick out the right dress, the right food and the music, the husband's practice going down the tube, between it is her mother, Jessie thinking she is shakespeare's lover. I would be ready to pull out my hair about now. Anyone, who is in the middle of planning a large reception( bar mitzvah, wedding etc) would relate to this. The question is, is it wrong for her mother to think she is shakespeare's lover. Do we let her think this way. The daughter who is becoming a Bat Mitzvah says it best in her ceremony(d'var torah). We interput things according to who we are and what we think. It's not a matter of it being true or false but of it making sense and helping us to see things that we did not see before. We can't really tell the future and we can't really understand the past- but we can find ways to interpet them that help us live our lives better."
I enjoyed reading this book, It was hilarious I could not put it down. It was a let down, when it was not as important to find the lost sonnets in Venice. But, the book had to end.
Maybe the author will sell the rights for a movie.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 3, 2019I’m not Jewish and I have no interest in Shakespeare. However I liked this book a lot more than I thought I would. In fact I really enjoyed it. The characters are identifiable. There was humor in this book, and it was an easy, fun read. This is the only book I’ve read by this author but I might check out her others.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 16, 2008I thought this book was funny and reminded me a lot of past experiences, thoroughly enjoyed it. The book also came in excellent condition
- Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2015Lots of fun. I would love this lady writer to teach my college course.