A bitingly funny, hugely entertaining novel in which a fractured family from the Chicago suburbs must gather in London for their eldest daughter's marriage to an upper-crust Englishman, proving that the harder we strain against the ties that bind, the tighter they hold us close.
Grant Ginder is the author of THIS IS HOW IT STARTS and DRIVER'S EDUCATION. He received his MFA from NYU, where he teaches writing. He lives in Brooklyn.
A few summers ago, on the train back to the city from a wedding, a friend of Grant's pulled out three bottles of pinot grigio which he had managed to snag from the reception, and which they proceeded to finish in about forty-five minutes. And, as the train winded its way toward Manhattan, the friend turned to Grant with glossy eyes and said "Okay, guys, people we hated at the wedding: go." The next day, Grant started writing.
Fact: best title of any novel ever. This story about a
dysfunctional blended family and a wedding in England is sinfully
good.
-- Elin Hilderbrand
A feast of bitchy characters, dysfunctional family dynamics and
hilarious, over-the-top catastrophe.
-- People Ginder takes family dysfunction to its hysterical limit
in this joyously ribald, sharply cynical, and
impossible-to-put-down examination of love and loyalty.
-- Publishers Weekly, Starred Review
The summer's most compelling fictional exploration of affluence and
envy, it skillfully mingles the introspective ways of a domestic
novel with the juicy stratagems of a page turner...Especially
well-suited to this summer of our discontent. Like all the best
beach reads, it eats the rich like so many frozen grapes.
-- Bloomberg BusinessWeek
An over-the-top dishfest that atones for the sins of its characters
with sly humor and a surprisingly big heart.
-- Departures
Reading this book is like watching a really good indie
rom-com...It's a dysfunctional family saga; sort of like Cynthia
D'Aprix Sweeney's "The Nest" last year, but funnier... Ginder finds
that careful balance of making fun of his characters while
maintaining affection for them; by this saga's end, you wish them
all well.
-- The Seattle Times
A vibrant celebration of the modern family and all the crazy,
hilarious and wild ways we love each other...This is the best
wedding drama since My Best Friend's Wedding.
-- Redbook Witty and completely absorbing, The People We Hate at
the Wedding is family dysfunction at its best --full of heart,
humor, and jealous siblings. This novel is addicting and
entertaining and I couldn't put it down!
-- Jennifer Close, New York Times bestselling author of Girls in
White Dresses and The Hopefuls Not only does it have the best title
in the universe, The People We Hate At The Wedding is wickedly
smart and shamelessly funny. Grant Ginder brilliantly captures
privileged Brits clashing against semi-privileged Americans in the
most hilariously cringeworthy ways. Cluelessly self-absorbed,
appallingly outrageous, and so very endearing, these are characters
I hope to be seated with at the next wedding I attend.
--Kevin Kwan, New York Times bestselling author of Crazy Rich
Asians and China Rich Girlfriend
Don't be fooled by the superbly sardonic title--Grant Ginder's
subject is not hate at all: it's love. Ginder expertly and
hilariously shows us that real love (whether romantic or fraternal,
parental or filial) is always a most complicated matter.
--Rumaan Alam, author of Rich and Pretty
Ginder successfully captures the clash between people who are
intimately connected yet deeply at odds. These characters are
completely clueless and utterly self-absorbed yet highly likable,
their trials and tribulations painful at times and joyful at others
but always entertaining. Ginder's latest is a fascinating
exploration of family dynamics and the complex way we interact with
those who know us best.
-- Booklist, Starred Review It turns out that the people we hate at
the wedding are the very people we most love reading about. Grant
Ginder's smart, funny novel is madly insightful and contains some
of the most delightfully difficult and fabulously flawed characters
I've encountered in a long time. I found myself worrying about them
as I drove to work, hoping things would turn out well for (almost)
all of them.
-- Stephen McCauley, bestselling author of The Object of My
Affection Ginder has a gift for the gleefully outrageous, dishing
out one over-the-top scene after another... A daisy chain of
debacles makes time spent with people we hate good fun.
-- Kirkus Reviews
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