We Are Gathered

We Are Gathered

by Jamie Weisman

Narrated by Emily Lawrence, Josh Bloomberg

Unabridged — 9 hours, 39 minutes

We Are Gathered

We Are Gathered

by Jamie Weisman

Narrated by Emily Lawrence, Josh Bloomberg

Unabridged — 9 hours, 39 minutes

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Overview

One afternoon in Atlanta, Georgia. Two people heading to the altar. One hundred fifty guests. The bride, Elizabeth Gottlieb, proud graduate of the University of Virginia and of Emory University School of Law, member of Atlanta's wealthy Jewish elite. The groom, Hank Jackson, not a member. Not a Jew. The couple of the hour, however, is beside the point, because We Are Gathered belongs to the guests.



Among them, Carla, Elizabeth's quick-witted, ugly duckling childhood best friend turned Hollywood film scout, whose jaundiced view of the drama that is an American wedding provides a lens of humor and its corollary, deep compassion for the supporting actors who steal the show; Elizabeth's great-aunt Rachel, a Holocaust survivor from Germany who is still navigating a no-man's-land between cultures and identities decades after escaping from the forests of Europe; Elizabeth's wheelchair-bound grandfather Albert, who considers his legacy as a man, both in the boardroom and the bedroom; and Annette, the mother of the bride herself, reminded now of her youthful indiscretions in love and motherhood.

Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher

Long-listed for the 2019 JQ Wingate Literary Prize Nominated for the Georgia Author of the Year Award, First Novel Category One of Reading Group Choices' Most Popular June Books “Skillfully told through multiple first-person narratives, We Are Gathered portrays not only the couple’s story, but also—or rather, primarily—the stories of their friends and family…. Jamie Weisman adroitly constructs a community of characters, each created with a private network of thoughts and feelings, hopes and dreams…a masterful portrait of both sharp and delicate beauty.” —Jewish Book Council “As sparkling as a glass of champagne, and as moving as a wedding kiss, Weisman deconstructs the novel—and the nuptial—to tell a story about the guests, all of whom are bound to their pasts, created by their pain and elevated by their passions, set against the blazing hope of happily ever after. 'You can’t know who you are until the end of the story,' says one character, but in this novel, it’s clear who Weisman is from the first sentence: a writer to watch.” —Caroline Leavitt, best-selling author of Pictures of You and Cruel Beautiful World "We are Gathered is suffused with insight and warmth, interweaving the voices of vastly different characters in a big-hearted and clear-eyed story of life’s biggest choices: who to love and how best to love them. The fast-moving, playful intelligence Jamie Weisman brings to this book makes it both compulsively readable and oh so worth the read." —Heather Harpham, author of Happiness: The Crooked Little Road to Semi-Ever After   “With dazzling storytelling and a stunning eye for truth, Jamie Weisman gives voice to the never-heard in We Are Gathered, revealing the interior lives of wedding guests as they reckon with paths taken—and not. An amazing book.” —Randy Susan Meyers, author of The Widow of Wall Street "Jamie Weisman’s debut novel We Are Gathered is a pleasure. Like the best kind of party, it has an engaging, energetic mood, lots of captivating people to get to know, and no one wants to leave at the end.” —Tova Mirvis, author of The Book of Separation and The Ladies Auxiliary   “Weisman glides through several points of view with a graceful fluidity, illuminating the complex interior lives of her characters, and in doing so creates a poignant slice of life much greater than the sum of its eloquent parts.” —Kris D’Agostino, author of The Antiques “Unique…compelling…creatively put together.” Book Riot, “All the Books” "Elizabeth Gottlieb is getting married; and although her bridegroom isn’t Jewish, the family has invited 150 guests to the celebration. This debut novel by memoirist Weisman, however, is not about Elizabeth but about several of the guests at the wedding...Weisman’s ability to explore these troubled minds creates a multifaceted story of the difficulties people face." —Library Journal

Kirkus Reviews

2018-03-20
Monologues in the voices of six guests, plus the mother of the bride, at a wedding in Atlanta."There is no justice in this world, and you can start with the simple fact that some people look like Elizabeth Gottlieb," announces Carla Leftkowitz at the opening of the first story in Weisman's fiction debut, set at Elizabeth's wedding among the Jewish elite. The beauty of her lifelong friend, whom she now serves as bridesmaid, is particularly enervating because Carla has a port-wine birthmark covering half her left cheek. Author Weisman's background as a dermatologist adds texture to Carla's furious ruminations on physical beauty, as she passes her time imagining her 17 sister bridesmaids with "double chins, saggy breasts, twenty unlosable pounds around the middle, disappointment creased into their foreheads," yet she also dreams of a time "when we evolve to see the beauty in the stroked-out and the misshapen, the one-eyed and the cleft-lipped, the swollen and the stained." In the next story we hear from a character even more bitter than Carla: Elizabeth's grandfather Albert, a powerful, repellent man now mute and confined to a wheelchair after a stroke. Next up...a close family friend, who's attending with her nasty husband and also-wheelchair-bound son, the latter having been Elizabeth's charge when she worked as a teenager at a summer camp for the disabled. There are just a few tendrils of backstory to tie the characters together and virtually no plot development in the present tense of the wedding, so these long forays into the unhappy characters' inner lives have to hold the reader's attention on their own.Though the wild, wounded rant of the opening story seems promising, by the time we get to the mental patient and the Holocaust survivor who wander (separately) off into the woods, the reader, too, is ready to leave.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940170156993
Publisher: HighBridge Company
Publication date: 07/24/2018
Edition description: Unabridged

Read an Excerpt

There is no justice in this world, and you can start with the simple fact that some people look like Elizabeth Gottlieb. That some people have high cheekbones, wide eyes, long lashes, and look better than the rest of us even after they’ve just come back from running the six miles that they claim exhilarates them. That those people will never sit alone at snack time, will always have a partner for the art project, will turn down at least two dates for prom before going with the person they really want to go with, that they will be given the option of extra credit if they fare poorly on chemistry exams, will be invited to parties, will have youthful flings with movie stars and at least one semi-famous drummer in a band and then marry a good looking guy who wants nothing more than to provide for her into her old age. No justice. None.

Stories since the first image was scratched onto the side of a cave have started on the basis of the beauty of women and the courage of men. No amount of surgery, gym time, make-up or designer clothing could ever make me look like my friend Elizabeth, and although you might argue that I contribute to the world in different ways, even more important ways because my SAT scores are higher and the screenplay I will someday write will teach the world about the tragedies of American imperialism or create a radical empathy for the mentally ill, Elizabeth could probably hit the books, study poetry, save orphans, in other words, match my contributions, and raise me one eyelash, and I’d have to fold. She is better in all ways than I, and there is nothing I can do to change that simple fact.

But, let me start at the beginning, before we got to this, Elizabeth’s wedding day, when guests are streaming up the driveway, friends of the Gottlieb family in pastel dresses and suits, all too warm for what will be summer weather in spring time. How fitting, though, for spring to bend to summer in honor of the bride, the summer’s day to which Elizabeth can be compared and be found more lovely and more temperate. The scene is not sullied by the sudden honk of a beige van, snorting up the driveway and forcing guests onto the freshly cut grass. Rather, the guests float aside and the van chuffs to a stop, the gentle giant, come to bow his knee to the princess.

The van door opens and Elizabeth’s grandma, Bubbie Ida steps out. She was always the prettiest grandmother, and I see she is rocking a periwinkle suit and a diamond broach. She steps forward to receive a kiss from a guest. Bubbie Ida told us to sit with our ankles crossed, not our thighs, to prevent varicose veins. She also said to cover half our plate with a piece of bread and only eat what we could see. That would keep us from getting fat. The side of the van opens, and there is that beeping sound that trucks make backing up as a man in a wheelchair is lowered to the ground on a hydraulic ledge. Ida takes the reins of the chair to push. Propped in the chair is what is left of Elizabeth’s once fearsome and terrifying Zadie, Albert Myerson, once one of the richest man in Atlanta, before he was fair eclipsed by the founders of Home Depot. Bubbie Ida is stopped every few inches by well-wishers. Then she comes face to face with Zadie Albert’s doppelganger, a tiny thread of a man curled into a wheelchair that I at first take for Stephen Hawking before recognizing Jeffrey Wolf, who I did not know was still alive.

I heard that Elizabeth’s grandfather had had a stroke. I was always scared of Zadie Albert growing up. They had an overly chlorinated swimming pool, the only one we had access to before the neighborhood ones opened up, so we would congregate there in May, and swim until our eyes turned red. Bubbie Ida had installed a slide, obviously for the use of children, and she made us sandwiches with the crusts cut off, but if you dripped water into the house or splashed the plants in the planters, Zadie Albert would yell. Now he is confined to a wheelchair, his skin ashen and his eyes bruised. I feel pity for him and want to look away, and with the quick drop of my head, eyes shifted to the side with a sudden fascination for something on the ground, I recognize a move people have made in response to my appearance.

My mother once called him a small time despot, ruling over the synagogue and his business of   — I actually never knew what business he had — just that he was a businessman and rich. Now look at him, boneless, almost skinless, he should be wrapped in cellophane and styrofoam and put in a refrigerated case. So sad and pathetic, the remains of him. Pity, I feel, and a bit of revulsion and fascination, but then the light flashes off the white stubble of his beard and it glistens like spun glass. There is a silk spider web line of drool from the corner of his mouth to his shoulder. He is magnificent, this empty conch of a man, fossilized, museum-worthy, propped in a wheelchair that should be a marble stand. Move over Michelangelo’s David, I give you: Decrepitude.

Let me run into the house now, find a bathroom and a mirror. Stare at my own face, and title it, not Decrepitude. Let me think. Is there an equally weighty word for not quite right? Not so obviously wrong as a human being with three eyes, or one, Cyclopic, not a monster, but a mistake. I give you: Abnormality. Anomaly. Deviance. Oddity.
 

Portrait of the artist as a high school loser. I had a port wine stain covering half of my left cheek, encircling my left eye like a claw, extending down my neck and no, to all the people who have asked or imagined, not touching the breast. Because of the port wine stain, I had a limp. The blood vessels erupting on my face were buried in my leg, but they made the right leg fatter and longer than the left. It was corrected in childhood with a surgery that involved breaking and fusing my femur. I spent the summer between first and second grade recovering from the surgery. The legs are the same length now, but the limp is incurable. Despite years of braces and orthopedic shoes, it cannot be fixed. Since infancy, I have worn glasses, though there are corrective lenses for the right eye only. The veins have smudged my vision in that eye, though my parents reminded me it could be worse. The first specialists told them I would be blind and have seizures and perhaps mental retardation. It was a good thing my father was a doctor. He took me to Boston Children’s, and we met Doctor Lloyd Hartman. He should have been a cardiologist with that name, my dad never tired of saying. Dr. Hartman told my parents I would not be retarded, and I would not be blind, but there was no fixing the port wine stain. It went too deep.

My baby pictures are hideous. I was a fat multi-colored gargoyle with an eyepatch and a swollen cheek. One day, I tore the pictures out of the photo album, ripped them to shreds and threw them away. When my mother found them, she showed the confetti to my father, and my father knocked softly on my open door and came into my room. I was ten years old. I was reading a book, book reading being the refuge of many of the deformed and untouchable. He put his hand on my cheek. He said, beauty is as beauty does. He told me I was beautiful and one day everyone else in the world would see what he could see. For his sake, I did not cry. I stared at the pages of my book. Marcia Brady is the pretty one. Cindy is cute. Everyone finds Jan, with her glasses and big teeth, annoying. At ten, I knew how the world worked.

In middle school, seventh grade to be exact, Sheila Bradford, who took ballet and was obsessed with all things dance — she had ballet slippers on her backpack, her lunch box, she walked like a penguin with her toes permanently askew, had the sudden revelation that the port wine stain made her classmate- the author, me — look like a Harlequin. Look, she said, pulling out a notebook with a picture of a black and white harlequin face on it. It’s you.

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