Side Dish by October Top Pick author Joanne Rendell
For my Book End Babes side dish, I’d like to offer what could be considered a “literary side dish”! In other words, I would like to offer a short passage which didn’t make it into my new novel, Crossing Washington Square. Although it ended up on the cutting room floor, I still love the passage and I think it gets at why women and book groups, novels and friendship are so important – and thus why Book End Babes rocks!
Here’s the set up: Rachel Grey and Diana Monroe are both literature professors in the old boys club of Manhattan University. Stuck in a male-dominated and crusty English department should create a kinship between them. However, they are very much at odds. Rachel is young, emotional, and impulsive. She wrote a book about women’s book groups which got her a slot on Oprah and she uses “chick lit” in her classes. Diana is aloof, icy, and controlled. She’s also a scholar of Sylvia Plath and thinks “beach” fiction is an easy ride for students.
Throughout the novel, the women have a number of run-ins where they argue about their very different views of literature. In one exchange (an exchange which got cut in the final version), Diana is being pretty rude about book groups implying that they are just an excuse for “bored suburban housewives” to get together and gossip. This is Rachel’s passionate response:
“Have you ever been to a book group, Diana?” Rachel blurted out, an angry flush rising on her cheeks. She didn’t wait for an answer. “If you ever go to one, you will see how wrong and short-sighted you are.” Rachel ignored Diana’s bored, slightly amused gaze and continued. “Book groups offer women so much. They offer an escape from families, demanding kids, the laundry, and the drone of a ball game. They offer a place to nurture and sustain friendships. Also, when women go to book groups, they are free to talk about books and ideas, stories and fantasies. In other words, once a week or once a month or whenever they meet, women can discuss something other than their kids, their husbands, the demands of their jobs. Book groups offer them a time to talk about what they love: books.”
Diana’s lips tightened a little and then she said simply, “I see you feel very passionately about this, Professor Grey.”
You can order CROSSING WASHINGTON SQUARE by clicking on the title cover in our side bar. Don’t forget to put October 29th on your calendar for our October Wine & Book Chat with Joanne!
Tell us what book you are PASSIONATE about and you’ll be entered to win an 8-pack 3 Musketeers Mint with Dark Chocolate (highly addictive), which is a great pick considering Diana & Rachel would definitely not be musketeers together at the beginning of the book. You’ll also be entered to win our Impulse Prize of the Week.
I’m generally very unenthusiastic when it comes to cooking and I like to channel my creative energies anywhere but the kitchen! However, I do have one recipe. It’s probably the easiest recipe that will ever appear on this site, but I promise you it’s yummy and will make great little hors d’oeuvres for a Book End Babes get together. I’ve even given it a French name so you can impress your guests! Most of all, these little morsels capture the spirit of my new novel, Crossing Washington Square, which tells the tale of two women who are as different as cheese and pineapple! (their tastes in literature are as different as cheese and pineapple too) 
CROSSING WASHINGTON SQUARE By Joanne Rendell
Across Washington Square live two very different women …with their very different love of books.






