Nice Book, If You Can Get It

Michie

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Looking for a good read? I recommend Brendan Hodge’s new work, If You Can Get It (Ignatius Press). If You Can Get It is a well written, engaging novel that intelligently explores living meaningfully in today’s superficial world. An educated Catholic friend recommended it to me. The title lodged Gershwin’s song in my head, so I picked up the book – and couldn’t put it down.

It’s a fast moving story featuring two very different adult sisters. If someone called it a cross between Frozen and a Hallmark Christmas movie, they wouldn’t be entirely wrong. (Oh, go ahead and admit you love Hallmark Christmas movies). But there’s more to it than that, of course.

The Hallmark signature big-city-business-woman-learns-what-life-is-really-about theme is at play, and so is Frozen’s sisters-with-clashing-personalities-find-their-gifts-and-become-better-versions-of-themselves theme. But there’s no schmaltzy romance, first snow on Christmas Eve in the town square, magic ice palace, comic-relief snowman, nor Disney soundtrack. Only that Gershwin tune running through your head.

Successful, thirty-something business woman, Jen, is climbing the corporate ladder, the next rung just within her grasp. Her Stanford MBA and hard work have earned her everything she wanted – a condo in the Bay Area, a BMW, an impressive wardrobe. Jen knows how to get the things she desires but she’s so busy focusing on success at work, she hardly notices how empty her life is.

Katie, ten years younger, has just graduated from college with a degree in Comparative Religion and no idea what to do next. What she does know is that she can’t possibly move back in with mom and dad, so she deposits herself, uninvited, into her sister’s well-ordered life. It’s a reluctant, but accepting odd couple. They’re sisters, after all.

Jen’s career takes several unexpected detours and the careening journey provides rollicking reading. Katie’s “career” dead-ends at Starbuck’s before it begins through a lack of direction and bad choices – but she never really had her mind on corporate America anyway. Perhaps she has chosen the better portion.

Jen and Katie’s relationship is not tumultuous, sparing the reader the melodrama that might be expected in a story described as featuring “two very different sisters.” Jen is really the focus, providing the most entertaining situations as well as the interior awakening Hodge handles in a natural way, which largely avoids the annoying didacticism than might have been employed by a less skilled writer.

What’s really remarkable is that this book about women is written by a man – and, as a female reader, I never felt like smacking him. In the author bio, Brendan Hodge is described as the father of seven. I’d be willing to bet at least a few are girls. And he’s likely to have a few sisters, too. From clothing to tempers, he obviously has easy access to first hand research opportunities and fact checkers. Who knew I’d learn what “kitten heels” are from a man?

Continued below.
Nice Book, If You Can Get It — Integrated Catholic Life™