Much Ado About Jessie Kaplan: A NovelSt. Martin's Publishing Group, 01/04/2007 - 288 páginas Paula Marantz Cohen's triumphant first novel, Jane Austen in Boca, was an inspired blend of classic English literature and modern American manners. Her new novel heads north to the seemingly quiet suburban town of Cherry Hill, New Jersey, for a comedy that even Shakespeare couldn't have imagined. |
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... Moishe, who bounded toward them wearing a yarmulke on top of a toupee— something that struck Mark as particularly redundant. The inside of the building was cluttered with aluminum pans, serving bowls, and cardboard boxes, but an area ...
... Moishe retreated to a mysterious area behind the cluttered office that one assumed to be the kitchen. Almost immediately, a large Hispanic man, wearing a chef's hat and a mildly irritated expression, emerged holding a tray with three ...
... Moishe, “Now for the soup. It's good to get everyone settled down with the soup. We have a nice matzoball soup—lightest matzo balls in the Delaware Valley—no offense to Grandma.” The soup was brought out by the surly chef. Stephanie ...
... Moishe, were what most kids chose. “And now for the final and most important course,” said Moishe, looking knowingly at Stephanie. “The dessert. Can we make it taste like ice cream?—that is the question. Not one of the Four Questions, I ...
... Moishe's brand of salesmanship rubbed him the wrong way, and he still wasn't thrilled by the idea of serving food that imitated other food. But he had to admit that it had all tasted pretty good and that the whole thing had transpired ...
Índice
Chapter Seven | |
Chapter Nine | |
Chapter Thirteen | |
Chapter Fifteen | |
Chapter Seventeen | |
Chapter Twenty | |
Chapter Twentythree | |
Chapter Twentysix | |
Chapter Twentyeight | |