What Do You Do All Day?: A Novel

Amy Scheibe's debut novel is a fresh, funny, witty take on the magic manic days of young motherhood. Her Jennifer Bradley is a thoroughly modern mommy—a former club kid who is married to the man of her dreams and who quit a fabulous job as an antiquarian objects dealer to raise her two children: Georgia, a very advanced age 4, and baby Max.

But it's alarmingly easy to spin a stay-at-home mommy's world on its axis—and Jennifer's is whirling. If it's not her mother-in-law on her tail to expose her precious grandchildren to a better element (not to mention pointing out that dangerous concrete floor in their loft), it's her husband Thom announcing he'll be on the road to Singapore for the next who-knows how long. And is this really the right time for her dad to announce that her mother isn't exactly who Jennifer thinks she is? Or for the ex-boyfriend—aka the Adult Child Actor—to come back on the scene?

An American answer to Alison Pearson's I Don't Know How She Does It, What Do You Do All Day? is a sparkling, lovable novel for mommies of all kinds—whether in the trenches or out on the hustings.

"1100667206"
What Do You Do All Day?: A Novel

Amy Scheibe's debut novel is a fresh, funny, witty take on the magic manic days of young motherhood. Her Jennifer Bradley is a thoroughly modern mommy—a former club kid who is married to the man of her dreams and who quit a fabulous job as an antiquarian objects dealer to raise her two children: Georgia, a very advanced age 4, and baby Max.

But it's alarmingly easy to spin a stay-at-home mommy's world on its axis—and Jennifer's is whirling. If it's not her mother-in-law on her tail to expose her precious grandchildren to a better element (not to mention pointing out that dangerous concrete floor in their loft), it's her husband Thom announcing he'll be on the road to Singapore for the next who-knows how long. And is this really the right time for her dad to announce that her mother isn't exactly who Jennifer thinks she is? Or for the ex-boyfriend—aka the Adult Child Actor—to come back on the scene?

An American answer to Alison Pearson's I Don't Know How She Does It, What Do You Do All Day? is a sparkling, lovable novel for mommies of all kinds—whether in the trenches or out on the hustings.

11.99 In Stock
What Do You Do All Day?: A Novel

What Do You Do All Day?: A Novel

by Amy Scheibe
What Do You Do All Day?: A Novel

What Do You Do All Day?: A Novel

by Amy Scheibe

eBookFirst Edition (First Edition)

$11.99 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers


Overview

Amy Scheibe's debut novel is a fresh, funny, witty take on the magic manic days of young motherhood. Her Jennifer Bradley is a thoroughly modern mommy—a former club kid who is married to the man of her dreams and who quit a fabulous job as an antiquarian objects dealer to raise her two children: Georgia, a very advanced age 4, and baby Max.

But it's alarmingly easy to spin a stay-at-home mommy's world on its axis—and Jennifer's is whirling. If it's not her mother-in-law on her tail to expose her precious grandchildren to a better element (not to mention pointing out that dangerous concrete floor in their loft), it's her husband Thom announcing he'll be on the road to Singapore for the next who-knows how long. And is this really the right time for her dad to announce that her mother isn't exactly who Jennifer thinks she is? Or for the ex-boyfriend—aka the Adult Child Actor—to come back on the scene?

An American answer to Alison Pearson's I Don't Know How She Does It, What Do You Do All Day? is a sparkling, lovable novel for mommies of all kinds—whether in the trenches or out on the hustings.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781429936422
Publisher: St. Martin's Publishing Group
Publication date: 08/22/2006
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 320
File size: 354 KB

About the Author

About The Author
Amy Scheibe is the author of What Do You Do All Day? She has written for Dame Magazine, Seattle Weekly, The Forward, The Jewish Quarterly, and other publications. Born in Minnesota and reared in North Dakota, she now lives in the Catskill mountains with her husband and two children.
AMY SCHEIBE is the author of What Do You Do All Day? She has written for Dame Magazine, Seattle Weekly, The Forward, The Jewish Quarterly, and other publications. Born in Minnesota and reared in North Dakota, she now lives in the Catskill mountains with her husband and two children.

Read an Excerpt

What Do You Do All Day?


By Amy Scheibe

Picador

Copyright © 2005 Amy Scheibe
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-4299-3642-2


CHAPTER 1

WHEN THE PHONE RINGS I know it's going to be bad news.

"Jennifer? Hillary. You do speak Spanish, don't you?" Hillary Jacobs asks me, her voice on the edge of a scream, no friendly hello to kick things off. "Sorry for the commotion, we're having a pool put in downstairs — don't ask me how we're ever going to pay for it — and you wouldn't believe the mess."

"Well, no I don —"

"Great, four, then? Hortensia will bring an almuerzo. What, Chloë? No, Mommy's got a playdate with the lawyers. Okay then, Jen, it's settled. But let's have that dinner soon, okay? Ciao ciao."

As I set down the phone, my heart sinks even further. I'd call Thom and complain about this development if he weren't on a plane to Paris, damn him. I guess I have to face up to spending an hour with Hortensia and Chloë without her mother present. Georgia hasn't made friends easily, and Chloë's the only child who has taken to my daughter in her first few weeks of school. Hillary Jacobs had approached me for this date, and now she's second-tiering me off to her nanny, with whom I cannot communicate. I spent four years studying French at Columbia University with a semester in Tunisia when I could have been learning a more useful language, for exactly how often do I use it? Frère Jacques, if you know what I mean.

The buzzer rings at 4, and even with an hour of pre-playdate planning I'm still not ready. Georgia has, as of 3:45, decided that she hates Chloë, and all the Christian charity pleading in the world has not swayed her from her pole position. Or should I say "pool position," as it is the small matter of Chloë's new pool that has put Georgia in her snit. It seems that she thinks we should put one in as well. In where? I ask her. In a better apartment with a garden and trees seems to be her solution. Getting my precious cargo into the very exclusive Park Street Preschool is looking more and more like the mistake I told Thom it would be.

I go to the door, homemade play-dough in my hair where Max smeared me with his greasy little hands. Two in four years seemed like a good idea at the Club Med "we entertain your child, you have sex" getaway beach in Jamaica. Now I'm not so sure. Don't get me wrong, Max is a dream, but he's a giant baby and has given me more than a little sciatica during his slow acquisition of walking skills. He also refuses to crawl when I'm around. He just lies there, or sits there, eyes scrunched, and screams when he wants "up, up, up." No words yet either, except the aforementioned up and that old standby, no. And if I were to tell you that he has some teeth, I would be lying.

Hortensia is a shockingly exquisite woman, which is more than I can say for her charge. Chloë is carrying what looks to be a homeless woman's full load of assorted upscale shopping bags: brown striped Bendel, silver SFA, elongated pink Pink, and every schoolgirl's favorite, the Barneys chic black-and-white rectangular tote. Chloë herself is a study in noir: tights, Tod's ballet flats — no doubt special order from Bergdorf's — corduroy skirt, turtleneck, and yes, God love her, beret. I expect she would snap her fingers if they weren't entwined in silk cords. Underneath all this decoration is an exceedingly homely child. She looks at me like I've stepped in shit. And not the good kind.

"Where'th Georgia, I need her to help with the bagth," she squeaks out of her too-small mouth. "Mira, Hortenthia, buthca la cocina y hacerme almuerzo."

I know enough restaurant Spanish to get that I'm supposed to set Hortensia up in the kitchen, so I usher the two into our "modest" three-bedroom loft. Through Chloë's eyes, I see how poor we are, with our Pottery Barn furniture and concrete floors. Note to self: kill Chloë. Make it look like an accident. Of course, through Hortensia's eyes, we are rolling in it with our Sub-Zero refrigerator and our enormous living room that my PC guilt reminds me is fueled by more wattage than the average Mexican village.

By the time I have understood through broken Franglish (Hortensia: I need a pan. Me: What kind of bread?) that all of Chloë's food must be steamed according to the South Fork Diet — swear to God, the flounder fillet and twigs of broccoli look like something you'd give a fifty-year-old man with a heart condition — Chloë and Georgia have emptied the shopping bags onto the middle of the living-room rug and are discussing the finer points of having one's hair straightened thermally or reverse-permed.

"You want it to look like Malibu Barbie, thirca 1971, not Growin' Pretty Hair Thkipper of that thame year," Chloë instructs, using the vintage dolls as her models. I could cry — I had these very dolls thirty years ago. I sink into a chair and observe the tutorial. "Though you don't want the tan, or you'll need Botoxth by the time you're twenty. If you mutht tan, you can get the thpray thtuff at the thpa, it'th much better for you."

My daughter sits with her wide-eyed expression propped up on little fists, her gorgeous tangled curls spilling down to her elbows. She's clearly given her hostility a rest. Up until this moment, her knowledge of hair and skin products was limited to No More Tears and NoAd SPF 30. She has one Barbie, because for the longest time she thought there only was one Barbie. Hers. I am likewise entranced, as I've never seen a child Chloë's age quite so articulate. Mind you, I'm not exaggerating the lisp. On the plus side, it makes her Spanish sound impeccable.

This is Georgia's first rub with the truly wealthy, and my stomach twists on itself when I think about the years to come. We really have tried to keep her needs modest, but I can't kid myself that she won't be saying "I really mutht have a pony" sometime very soon. I'm also not crazy about her school's solution to sorting the children. Rather than following the public-school standard of having an age and grade designation, Park Street has open classrooms, and G routinely mingles with kids both younger and older. She is verbally advanced for her age, apart from the usual verb tense mix-ups and lazy r, but is she really ready to hang with prepubescents like Chloë?

"Up up up" comes from Max's room, where he has finished his "power nap." He sleeps like an SAT math problem: six hours a night in two three-hour shifts, with two thirty-minute naps spaced four hours apart during the day. Is my darling thirteen-month-old sleeping through the night? Bite me. It seems that about the time he does fall into a full sleep, Georgia finishes her nightly trek across the Arabian desert, and though she has four full sippy cups surrounding her bed, she's decided that the faucet in my bathroom, which she can't quite reach, is the only one that makes the water cold enough to extinguish her parch.

Hortensia, with some sort of baby sonar hardwired in her soul, glides through the room and lightly presses me back into the armchair from where I've been witnessing the destruction of my commercial-free daughter. She then proceeds to my son's room, in complete defiance of my "No, no, I'll get him." Must have been the whimpering, choking-back-a-strangled-sob tone in my voice.

When she returns, she says "Siesta" and points to my bedroom. I don't argue: this word I know.


The alarm rings thirty minutes later and I feel as though I've slept for days. I wouldn't have set the clock at all, but I couldn't risk having Hillary find out that I was asleep for the entire playdate. When I emerge from my room, I can't believe what I see. Chloë and Georgia have set a tea table with the fish and broccoli, and my daughter is holding her blunt knife and Pooh fork in the European manner. They are joined by more Barbies, Skippers, Kens, and Francies than I've ever seen. Max is in his high chair, spooning what must be mashed heart-attack diet food into his own mouth instead of the mouth of his good friend Teddy the Bear. All the toys are put away, and Hortensia is writing in what appears to be a journal while our usually unfriendly cat, Peeve, purrs in her lap. Tears spring to my eyes. I am a bad mother.

"Can you come again for another playdate tomorrow?" I ask Chloë, once they have packed up and are ready to leave.

"You'll have to check with Her," she says, apparently referring to her mother. "We're booked up awfully far in advanthe."

"Well, do you think that maybe Hortensia could come without you?" I say this after the door has closed, and mostly to myself.

CHAPTER 2

I ALWAYS WANTED CHILDREN. My therapist, years ago, back when I made my own money and could rationalize paying him two hundred dollars a week so I wouldn't feel "dizzy," tried to get me to understand my baby lust as a by-product of my mother's early death.

But I simply loved babies. Death? Schmeath. Besides, my father remarried before I could even say the word mama and so Cheryl has been exactly like a mother to me. At the risk of sounding perfectly hillbilly, I must admit right up front that Cheryl is also my aunt. Her sister, Nancy, married my father first, but when my birth mother wrapped her Cadillac around a tree a mere few weeks after my arrival, Cheryl stepped in to help my father with me and one thing, as they say, led to another. Not only is she my surrogate and adopted mother, in an odd way she's also my closest friend. Since we never had to contemplate the mother-daughter bond, we've always enjoyed an open and frank relationship. There isn't anything I can't tell her or anything she won't tell me. All that said, I might be forced at gunpoint to admit that choosing to drop all my hard-earned career advancements in order to become what I had once sneered at — a "stay-at-home mom" — may have had something to do with Nancy's death. I have this strange, deep-seated instinct to lavish as much of myself on my children as possible so that when I die young and beautiful, they will always remember me as the most important person in their little lives.

And so, my life is hell.

It's not that I never talk to an adult about anything adult, or that I haven't had my hair professionally cut in four years, or that my C-section scars — so erroneously referred to as "bikini cuts," as though I'll ever wear a bikini again — run like train tracks across my abdomen, supporting a hideous shelf of fat and muscle that no amount of Pilates will ever rectify. No, it's not that sex to me is an infrequently visited foreign land, or that the forty-two minutes a day I spend alone with my husband — when he's in the country — are devoted to discussing what the children have eaten, not eaten, and extruded all day.

It's basically that no matter how many organic vegetables I buy, how many teepees I build, that I take my kids twenty blocks out of my way to play on an arsenic-free wooden jungle gym, my determination to keep my home Disney tie-in free, that I wear a negligee at least once a week and balance the home budget ... when I stop to measure myself against the expectations around me, I find I am left chasing my own perfectionist tail. I run after the kids all day, exhausting myself beyond belief, then collapse here in bed only to find I can't sleep for all the thoughts pouring through my brain.

My ticking clock didn't stop to think about the responsibilities that come with babies. Keeping them alive, for instance. Babyproofing is harder than it looks, and danger really does lurk around every corner. This is why I ultimately found it easier to keep my dumplings home with me, snuggled up safe and warm, rarely venturing out, and then only as a group. I threw myself into intensive mothering, following the guides on how to make children thrive. I neglected to think about the day when they would have to leave the nest with their carefully clipped wings.

Oh, I was perfect all right. A perfect failure.

I am currently trying to address this wrong. Georgia was recently diagnosed by a specialist as having "too-close-to-mommy" syndrome. The therapist told me that Geege needs more friends her own age. It seems that my desire to keep her safe from the world has had unforeseen consequences. It is possible that I overreacted a little after 9/11, but Thom was away — of course — and we were all understandably a little freaked out. Maybe I should have taken her to a Gymboree or two, instead of huddling in our bunkerbuilt apartment, reading books and creating elaborate fantasy lands with paper and glue. I've fulfilled her every need and in so doing have brought her to the brink of panic attacks. She became terrified of leaving me alone, not because she didn't want to be apart from me but because she was afraid that I didn't exist when she wasn't with me. School has helped, but to keep her from becoming a classic agoraphobe I need to socialize my pet rock, overcoming my own extroverted shyness and occasionally leaving this place we affectionately call Elba.

It's not that I don't know what's out there. I've been living in Manhattan for most of my adult life and have benefited from its endless entertainment. Some may even say I've breathed rarified air with my pseudoglamorous entanglements and unusual career path. But one of the best parts of having kids was the ability to say no to invitations, to snuggle up with the babies instead of bellying up to a bar. I don't miss the nightclubs or the movie premieres; I've seen celebrity up close, and in the end it's just not all that impressive. Unfortunately, though, I'm not terribly interested in other parents — they scare me, to be honest, and I don't think it's very healthy for me to hang out with them and compare my kids to theirs. I do that enough in my head the way it is. Worst of all is encountering the working mom and measuring my lack of accomplishment against her speedy-quick successes as all my work suits have sagged on their hangers. I refuse to regret my decision, even if it turns out to have been the wrong one.

CHAPTER 3

THOM'S HOME FROM a trip to Spain, where he went to acquire a relic of Saint Peter for one of the clients of his art and antiquities dealership, and we have actually hired a real babysitter who isn't related to either of us to be paid money to stay with our children while we enjoy an evening out together. This hasn't happened since February 2002, not that I marked it on the calendar or anything, and it may not happen again until Mars comes back close to the earth, so I spent the afternoon shaving, plucking, filing, and buffing, while the kids watched Baby Shakespeare six times, my guilt increasing with each "Hi, I'm Julie Clark." I'm looking about as good as I can at this point, and I'm just hoping the restaurant's candlelight will do the rest, or that our view of the city draped across the river will distract Thom enough to keep him from noticing how the fine lines around my eyes have built up a resistance to spackle.

"You are absolutely gorgeous," he says, looking right at me. I attempt to suck my cheekbones up through my sinuses.

"Well, as gorgeous as I can get, I guess."

"Honey, take the compliment. I love your hair up like that. You're glowing," he tries again. Meanwhile, he's the one who looks gorgeous, early craggy crow's-feet blooming at the corners of his translucent hazel eyes, the barest hints of gray flecking his rich brown waves.

"Oh, that. That's the candlelight." I look up at the Brooklyn Bridge just outside the window, change the subject as I take in the view of lower Manhattan. "I really miss them, you know?"

"The kids? I'd think you'd enjoy a night away from them." He laughs, but it's a kind, soft sound.

"No, the towers," I say, sniffling a little from the champagne. "It just looks so flat down there now. I hope they manage to put up something respectful."

"You worry too much. It'll be fine." He pours more bubbly. We've finished our tuna tartare and our monkfish medallions and are now waiting the twenty minutes it takes for the chocolate soufflé to be baked. It's been a two-bottle affair this evening, and I'm feeling tipsy, tired, and emotional. I was feeling sexy about a bottle ago, but now I just want to cuddle up and drift into a dreamless sleep.

"Hey, Jen," Thom says, turning my chin back with his finger. I catch a whiff of his cologne, the same one he's always worn, that I've never smelled on any other man. "I want to thank you." He puts a long, slim blue box on the table. You know the one.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from What Do You Do All Day? by Amy Scheibe. Copyright © 2005 Amy Scheibe. Excerpted by permission of Picador.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

Reading Group Guide

Discussion Questions
1. What do you think of the voice that Amy Scheibe creates for Jennifer? Her use of humor? Do you feel that Jennifer is an honest narrator, or is she sometimes unreliable?
2. How might this story have been different if Jennifer were a single-mom? How might it have been different if Jennifer and Thom lived out in the country instead of Manhattan? And what if Thom didn't travel so much? How might it have been different if it were set in the 1950s?
3. In chapter 11, Jennifer tells the story of going to visit Portia, her friend from high school who had triplets. Portia describes how she had been passed over for promotion and was thinking about quitting her job and becoming a stay-at-home mother. After making a pro and con list,
Jennifer immediately tells Portia to keep her job. Why does she do that? Did Portia have an unrealistic idea of what being a stay-at-home mother would involve?
4. In chapter 12, Jennifer talks about her childhood and what it was like to grow up poor. She ties this in to the idea of wanting your kids to have a better life than the one you lived as a kid. How does this desire affect the way Jennifer mothers Georgia and Max? Is this a positive driving force for Jennifer, or is it making her uptight?
5. Jennifer lists some of the contradictory advice out there for parents: "Sleep with your child,
don't sleep with your child, keep her squeaky clean, dirt wards off asthma. If you don't put your child in day care, he won't be socialized. If you do, he will be aggressive..." How do you think Jennifer decides which advice to follow? Do you think she makes the right decisions?
6. What Do You Do All Day? contains many child characters. What do you think are the challenges of writing characters who are children? What is the difference between a child and an adult on the page and what nuances of children's behavior were revealed in this book?
7. On page 241, Jennifer realizes that Angie is a generous friend, and that she had done nothing to deserve it. Jennifer then comes to the conclusion that the reason Angie is such a good friend to her "is not because I'm special, but because Angie is." How is Angie special? Do you think that a person needs to deserve to have good friends in order to have good friends,
or is it just a matter of luck?
8. Do the events related to Bjorn's criminal activity and his implication of Thom's infidelity detract from Jennifer's search for meaning, or do they put her struggle in better perspective?
Would she have been able to make the decision to return to work if it hadn't been for the difficulties with her husband?
9. If you had been in Jennifer's situation and were presented with the evidence that Bjorn had given her that her husband had been cheating, would you have believed him? Would you have trusted Thom more than Jennifer did or would you have been just as suspicious?
10. Do you think Jennifer has a good relationship with her parents? How do you think it will be altered after learning the truth about her origins? Do you think she is good at handling her rocky relationship with Thom's mother Vera? Why do you think Vera disapproves of
Jennifer?
11. What do you think is the hardest thing about being a mother? The best thing about being a mother? Do you think Jennifer would agree? Why or why not?
12. Will Thom have some of the same difficulties that Jennifer had now that he is a stay-at-home father? Will it be different for him since he is a man? How should Jennifer support Thom?
Are Jennifer and Thom able to maintain a marriage based on equality?
13. Do you think that part of the reason Jennifer feels the need to pursue her career is because there is a pressure in society to go out and work? Does Jennifer put pressure on herself? How does her self-identification as a feminist alter the way she looks at being a stay-at-home mother? Does it get in the way of her capacity to feel satisfaction as a mother? Or does it push her to achieve her potential as a person?
14. What do you think is the future of the Bradleys? Do you think that Jennifer will still keep her job after the third baby is born? Do you think that she will find satisfaction now that she is actually pursuing her own career? Do you think she will find it difficult not to spend more

time with the children?

From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews