‘Other People’s Houses’ offers view from the carpool minivan

SHARE ‘Other People’s Houses’ offers view from the carpool minivan
ap18089688553182.jpg

| Berkley, via AP

“Other People’s Houses” (Berkley), by Abbi Waxman

Frances Bloom can jam seven children into a minivan designed for six with no problem. Her daily carpooling duty tethers her neighbors’ lives together. It also affords her snapshots of their mornings, which are typically less than scandalous. This changes the day Frances whips the car around to retrieve a kindergarten passenger’s forgotten school supplies. In addition to finding the urgent project tools (toilet paper rolls), she finds her neighbor, Anne Porter, in the middle of an affair with a younger man.

Abbi Waxman’s “Other People’s Houses” follows the four families impacted by Anne’s fling. Rumors and suspicions ooze through the upper middle-class Los Angeles neighborhood like slime, and even the tamest of marriages begin to toe fragility. All the while, Frances continues to taxi children to and from school, take her best shot at parenting a high schooler and two other needy children, and maintaining a sexless life with her dependable husband.

Large swaths of the read take place in Frances’ head. She possesses a hilarious inner dialogue and listening in on her decision process as to which chicken to purchase for dinner proves relatable and entertaining. When we’re not loitering in Frances’ psyche, we’re privy to other characters’ thoughts. The omniscient narration at times borders on feeling overdone (at one point we’re even in the head of a cashier), but avoids discombobulating territory.

Settings provide their own comedic flair to the hubbub. The drama unfolds in front yards, around kitchen tables and in the cheering section of dreaded youth soccer games.

Waxman’s take on the drudgery of parenting is fantastic. Anyone who has ever unintentionally memorized an episode of “Dora the Explorer” or attempted to awaken a sleeping teenager will find comradery with the comically flawed folks residing in “Other People’s Houses.”

CHRISTINA LEDBETTER, Associated Press

The Latest
Hundreds gathered for a memorial service for Cook County Clerk Karen Yarbrough, a mysterious QR code mural enticed Taylor Swift fans on the Near North Side, and a weekend mass shooting in Back of the Yards left 9-year-old Ariana Molina dead and 10 other people wounded, including her mother and other children.
Chicago artist Jason Messinger created the murals in 2018 during a Blue Line station renovation and says his aim was for “people to look at this for 30 seconds and transport them on a mini-vacation of the mind. Each mural is an abstract idea of a vacation destination.”
MV Realty targeted people who had equity in their homes but needed cash — locking them into decades-long contracts carrying hidden fees, the Illinois attorney general says in a newly filed lawsuit. The company has 34,000 agreements with homeowners, including more than 750 in Illinois.
The artist at Goodkind Tattoo in Lake View incorporates hidden messages and inside jokes to help memorialize people’s furry friends.
The bodies of Richard Crane, 62, and an unidentified woman were found shot at the D-Lux Budget Inn in southwest suburban Lemont.