From her website:
She worked ten years on My Hollywood. “It’s the book that took me too long because it meant so much to me,” she says.
Claire, a composer and a new mother, comes to L.A. so her husband can follow his dream of writing TV comedy. Suddenly, the marriage changes. Paul works long hours, leaving Claire with a baby, William, whom she adores but has no idea how to care for. Enter Lola—a 52-year-old mother of five, who comes to America to find work to pay for her own children’s higher education back in the Philippines. Lola stabilizes Claire’s rocky household, and soon other parents try to lure her away. What she sacrifices to stay with Claire and William remains her own closely guarded secret. In a novel, at turns satirical and heartbreaking, where mothers’ modern ideas are given practical overhauls by nannies, we meet Lola’s vast network of fellow caregivers, each with her own story to tell. We see the upstairs competition for the best nanny and the downstairs competition for the best deal, and are forced to ask whether it’s possible to buy love for our children and what that transaction costs. We see the endangerment of a modern marriage despite the best of intentions. This tender, witty, and resonant novel provides the profound pleasures readers have come to expect from Mona Simpson, here writing at the height of her powers.
For an excerpt, reviews, an outtake, and video of Mona Simpson reading from the novel, please click here.
Here’s the buko pie recipe:
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For the wedding of Lucy and Tony —