Title: Opening Belle
Author: Maureen Sherry
Author: Maureen Sherry
Read by: Julia Whelan
Publisher: Simon & Schuster Audio
Length: Approximately 10 hours and 20 minutes
Source: Simon & Schuster Audio Digital Review Copy – Thank-you!
Source: Simon & Schuster Audio Digital Review Copy – Thank-you!
In 2008, Belle is a successful manager on Wall Street trying to balance
work and home life. She is also trying
to juggle the perilous hazards at work where the men on Wall Street behave
badly and think that all women at work are fair game for grabs, squeezes, and morally
questionable comments. The women at
Feagin Dixon join together to create “the glass ceiling club” to try to figure
out how to work through the sexist policies at work and to also make it a
better place for them all to work.
While this is going on Belle experiences many troubles on the home
front. She is not able to spend the time
she would like to with her young children, and she also is having problems with
her husband Bruce. Belle was once
engaged to the lively, handsome, and charming Henry. After being together for nine years, Henry abruptly
told Belle she was no longer his fiancée with his arm wrapped about around
another woman. Belle never truly got
over this and married Bruce on the rebound.
Bruce is handsome and funny, but Belle is annoyed that he not only
doesn’t work to help support the family, but he also doesn’t take the part of
the house husband as they employ a nanny, housekeeper, and dog walker. At this time, Henry enters back into Belle’s
life working for her largest client. As
Belle tries to navigate the struggles of life, she finds herself drawn by the
allure of Henry.
I listened to the digital audiobook version of this novel. I really liked narrator Julia Whelan and was
drawn to the story while riding in the car and doing chores at home. Unfortunately, I felt the story was very
uneven. I couldn’t tell if this was a
women in the workplace novel, a lost love novel, or husbands gone bad novel –
it seemed to jump from topic to topic without being cohesive in the story
overall. Some novels are able to juggle
these different storylines, but I feel like this novel struggled with it –
especially at the end where a lot of things were thrown together. I did think it was very interesting story to
see Wall Street at this time before, during, and after the collapse.
I related to Belle on one hand as a working mother with an intense job,
but I struggled at times. I was supposed
to feel sorry for Belle with her high paying job, $3 million dollar salary,
nanny, housekeeper, dog walker, etc., but I realized that I actually work the
same amount of hours as Belle without a 6 figure salary, multimillion dollar
bonuses, and vast paid help network. It
was hard to feel sympathy for her – she seemed greatly out of touch of how the
rest of the world functions. Moving up
the ladder at an engineering firm such as where I used to work is also almost
impossible for a woman with children and there are also inappropriate comments.
I felt that portion of this novel was very interesting, realistic, and could
have been fleshed out more.
I don’t agree with the blurb that goes with this novel that it is “A whip-smart and funny novel.” I found it to be an overwhelmingly depressing
novel and did not find it full of laughs.
I don’t like how women’s fiction is always marketed like it has to be
funny to sell. Please don’t label things
as humorous that are not. It gets the
reader to buy the novel only to be disappointed when it turns out to be a drama
rather than a comedy.
I saw online that Opening Belle is being made into a movie by Reese
Witherspoon and Warner Brothers. I would
like to see it. Will they be able to put
the good parts of the novel together and get rid of the bad? I feel like the bones of a good movie are
within this novel.
SPOILER ALERT
I really did not like Belle’s husband, Bruce. Belle spends most of the novel complaining
about him (and the complaints seemed well deserved), and when it was discovered
he was cheating on her, I was ready for Belle to give him the ax and move on. Therefore, I was very, very disappointed when
Belle in the epilogue was making a new life with Bruce years later. They were separated, but together. I think she would have been a stronger woman
if she would have moved on without Bruce.
I actually found Henry to be more of a romantic, compelling character in
the book. The romance angle of this book
just felt forced. It could have been
trimmed down to focus more on the working woman angle.
I also didn’t like that the solution to the working woman problem is
that Belle had to give up her job and start afresh somewhere else. I feel like this is how all working women
novels end. Can’t women find a
successful resolution in their workplace without quitting? It’s disturbing to think about.
SPOILER END
Overall, Opening Belle is an interesting look at the world of Wall
Street at the cusp of the collapse.