Member Reviews

Thank you NetGalley and Pushkin Press for sending me this advanced copy for review.

tw: eating disorder, anorexia, bulimia

Dinner Party follows the Gleeson family over a number of years as they deal with trauma and loss, and particularly Kate Gleeson’s mental health and difficult relationship with food.

Kate hosts a dinner party for her family on the 16-year anniversary of her twin sister’s death. It is clear as the story develops that the characters’ lives are heavily influenced by their difficult and controlling mother and her feeling that the less-favoured twin was taken away from her.

Sarah Gilmartin’s writing around Kate’s eating disorder was incredible, but the remainder of the story was extremely slow with super long chapters. I felt that a deeper dive into Kate’s mother’s mental health could have been explored, as her own issues had such a huge impact on her children’s adult lives and their relationships with others.

I’m glad I read Dinner Party but I’m not sure I’ll be picking up a copy or recommending it to anyone.

Was this review helpful?

Such a good book! Loved it and can’t wait to read another book by this author! Highly recommend it to others!

Was this review helpful?

This book is completely different to anything I've read before and I'm always open to trying new things so thought I'd give it a go!

In Halloween of 2018, Kate has her family round for a dinner party marking the anniversary of the death of her twin sister Elaine. The book explores her mental health journey through this time and looks at how it develops as she grows up, jumping from different timelines.

The mental health and eating disorder is written well by the author and I appreciate this in its writing style. However, the timeline of the story I really struggled to follow and this made the pacing seem quite slow. I felt the second half of the book flowed a little better but the pacing definitely needs some work. Personally, I am not a massive fan of extremely long chapters, so this was something else that threw me off.

I am glad I read the book as it always exciting to read a different genre and I believe the book definitely has potential! Thanks to Netgalley and Pushkin Press for the arc!

I do a tiktok round up usually at the end of the month so this will be in that!

Was this review helpful?

I really do love a book that centers around a dysfunctional family! We follow the events of Kate as she plans a (disastrous) dinner party on the anniversary of her twin sister's death; weaving through the past and present, we explore the family's reaction to their grief and loss. This is very much a multi-layered character driven novel. The captivating prose and craft in which the author feeds information held my interest throughout. Overall, a beautifully written and moving novel. I look forward to reading more from the author.

Was this review helpful?

This was good, but different from what I was expecting from the description. For one thing, the titular dinner party wasn't anywhere near as central as you might expect. The blurb makes it sound as if this is about family secrets, in a dramatic, someone was poisoned or finds out they're the illegitimate product of a love affair way. It's maybe 40% the family situation (tragedy yes, no secret drama alas) and 60% how our protagonist (badly) handles said family situation through eating disorders, alcohol abuse, and affairs. If you're looking for a book that makes you feel, this is for you (although be warned many of those feelings will be of the frustrating, wish-you-could-slap-a-fictional-character variety). If you're looking for a book that resolves those feelings, maybe not.

Thanks to #NetGalley and Pushkin press for the ARC.

Was this review helpful?

I absolutely loved reading this book. I was completely drawn into the topic and could not stop reading it.

Was this review helpful?

This book was challenging for me to read primarily because of the slow tempo and the chapters' tendency to veer between the past and present. I could not connect with any of the characters, although I tried. This was a DNF for me unfortunately.

Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for the chance to read and review this book!

Was this review helpful?

Dinner Party is the story of family and loss and death’s unique impact has on each member of a family. The story is set in Ireland and follows Kate whose mother struggle with what seems to be undiagnosed bipolar disorder. Kate is dealing with the loss of her father and, more so, her twin sister even years after the tragedy. Her coping mechanisms of anorexia, alcohol, and sex are also a cry for help which thankfully her dutiful brothers finally heed. A relatable novel although not uplifting.

Was this review helpful?

What this book does incredibly well: tragedy. The family drama is very well done. It kept me interestd throughout the novel, but I also understand why some people might find the plot a bit lacking. I enjoyed the read, but objectively speaking, I'd still give it 3.5/5 Stars. I'll definitely recommend this to people, but not to everyone.

Was this review helpful?

Strong 3.5 stars.

We open the story with Kate, a woman in her 30s who is hosting a dinner party for her siblings. They are gathering to remember the death of Elaine, their late sister and Kate's twin. After the dinner party (which is a bit of a fiasco, but not so terrible that there is drama there), Kate spends the rest of the evening combing back through memories of her life as a child and teenager. All this to say: if you're picking this up because you want to read about a dinner party, know that the party is over within about 30 pages.

Kate's hallucinogenic way of going through the past means that the timeline is somewhat hard to follow. Sometimes she is a child, only 12 or so. Sometimes she is a freshman in college. Sometimes it's almost modern day. Then we are back to her as a teenager. A child. The day of Elaine's death. Her life the week before the dinner party. A child again. It's never entirely clear when or why Gilmartin makes these jumps, so you as the reader might be a paragraph or two into a timeline before you've figured out what is going on in Kate's life. It's not impossible to follow, but you do have to be paying attention.

So, why three stars? Because though the cover and marketing (it's marked as "CRIME" on Goodreads) imply that this is a dark book about a family secret that comes up through a dinner party, what it's really about is an emotionally and physically abusive mother and Kate's fairly serious eating disorder.

Separately, I think either of these two things would have worked with the novel. But together, plus the timeline hopping plus Elaine's death looming over the work as a whole, it felt like a trauma parade. I suppose it's in the title — "A Tragedy." But the thing is, Kate's life is not a tragedy. Kate tries, and has siblings who love her and watch out for her, and it isn't the dinner party that is the tragedy, but their shared childhood.

I did find the writing easy to blast through, and once I was 30% in (which took me about 2 weeks), I read the rest of it in just a couple sittings. I would be curious to see what else Gilmartin writes.

Was this review helpful?

A thoroughly beautiful and heart wrenching family saga exploring loss, and family dynamics can impact across entire lives. Subtle humour plays out across the inherent sadness of the story which made it very engaging for me. This is a quiet novel, no fast paced plots, just beautifully drawn and complex characters and their nuanced relationships to each other. A wonderful read, a very special novel.

Was this review helpful?

This was a bleak book about a dysfunctional family. As a teenager, Kate lost her twin sister, was ruled by an overbearing mother and ended up in treatment for an eating disorder. Now in her 30’s, her eating issues have again surfaced and she is in denial. The book flips between the past and the present. Slow moving, it took me awhile to complete the book. I received a copy of this book from NetGalley and One Publishing. This opinion is my own.

Was this review helpful?

Have you ever had a little ‘pluck’ in a piece of clothing and pulled it? Yeah, bet you wished you’d left it alone, right?! Over dinner at the farmhouse one Hallowe’en, the ‘pluck’ gets pulled on the fibres of this Irish family and it slowly unravels.

Family dinners in our home are more than just the food. True, it’s always anticipated and always enjoyed. But it’s also about the conversations around the table. It’s about supporting each other as a family as we all get to understand each other better. It’s no different for the Gleeson family.

Meals are a big part of this family’s life. In each of the six sections in the book, Gilmartin features food and readers become aware of the different relationships each has with food. For some, it brings them together and for others, it’s a source of repulsion.

You would think that a party would suggest a celebration, but this family gets together every year on the anniversary of a death in the family. It’s an emotionally filled meal and the setting is ripe for discord. Gilmartin writes to explore what happens when the guests leave, and the festivities are over….and it’s no cause for a celebration. The Gleeson family is coming apart at the seams. What’s uncovered after the dinner party are the dishes of denial, trauma, family disagreements, mental health issues, eating disorders, and loss.

This book is about family and the role it plays in supporting each member. Most Irish families are centered around the matriarch and Gilmartin uses this to her advantage. Bernadette Gleeson is a force to be reckoned with and her ‘charm’ sets off different reactions within the family….all of which reach an explosive point after dinner one Hallowe’en evening.
This is an extremely well-written character-driven novel that deals with big issues in a dysfunctional family, but it’s presented with such authenticity and leaves readers with a glimmer of hope. I just wanted to give Kate a big hug, twirl her around and point her in the right direction.

The cover is excellent and best understood after finishing the book.

I was gifted this copy by Pushkin Press and NetGalley and was under no obligation to provide a review.

Was this review helpful?

Family sagas are my fave genre and well this one was definitely literary and intriguing it was a tad uneventful and bleak.

Was this review helpful?

"Dinner Party” delves into the complexities of family dynamics with pitch dark humor. Kate, hosting a party to commemorate the death of her twin sister, struggles to control the tensions that permeate her family gathering. Told in two timelines the novel builds in intensity as it reaches the end culminating in a last third that is impossible to stop reading.

Was this review helpful?

"si no cambiamos, no crecemos; si no crecemos no estamos vivos. if we don’t change, we don’t grow; if we don’t grow, we are not alive."

thank you to netgalley and the publisher for an arc of this wonderful book!

sarah gilmartin's "dinner party" is a nonlinear telling of a family coping with death and grief. we follow kate, who lost her twin sister, elaine, in a tragic accident in her youth. kate is trying to rebuild the relationships with her two living siblings and her overbearing, toxic mother while dealing with an eating disorder. food is the method of healing, each chapter revolves around a particular meal. kate is eager to please, and does everything her mother wants despite her constant disappointment in all of her children; ray who moves to america and abandons the family farm, and peter who she finds to be useless.

this charming novel is enhanced by its nonlinear form. we visit kate throughout various points in her life and see her struggle with an eating disorder and her mental health, as well as interact with food as a form of comfort. it was truly a wonderful read, with natural, fast paced dialogue and a deep dive into the characters' psyches. the descriptions are rich, and the emotions are heavy. the end, however, did not hold enough resolution for me. grief affects everyone differently, and yet it doesn't ever truly go away. this extremely dysfunctional family was a pleasure to get to know.

Was this review helpful?

4 stars!

I’ve seen a lot of reviews stating that it was a slow paced book, I don’t disagree, but it did keep my interest until the end.

The book follows a dysfunctional family from the 1990’s to present in the eyes of the main character Kate. I really enjoy when books have multiple timelines.

Overall, I found this book very enjoyable and thought it was a great debut for Sarah Gilmartin! If you're put off by the other reviews, I would recommend giving this one a chance. It was very enjoyable, and I found some parts to be relatable.

Thank you NetGalley for this advanced ready copy in exchange for my honest review.

Was this review helpful?

I struggled with this one. I enjoy family fiction and sagas. I enjoy reading about well-developed and complex characters. This was lacking in this book. I did not feel a connection to any of the character in Dinner Party. I struggled to follow the story as it traveled between various periods without much indication. I kept with it, hoping it might just be a slow burn, but I regret continuing. It should have been a DNF for me.

Thank you NetGalley for an electronic copy in exchange for review.

Was this review helpful?

Dinner Party: A Tragedy begins with Kate hosting a dinner party for her two brothers and sister-in-law to commemorate the anniversary of her twin's death. I thought the pace was slow, but the writing was beautiful. Although I thought that I would love this story based on the description, this story was too sad for me. I expected the terrible grief around the death of a twin, but there was too much tragedy: an eating disorder, verbal child abuse, extreme family dysfunction, infidelity, death of a parent, broken marriage, loss of dreams, etc.

Thank you to Pushkin Press for an ARC via NetGalley.

Was this review helpful?

Dinner Party, by Sarah Gilmartin, is a smart and witty family saga set in Ireland and loaded with an Irish vernacular, scenery and obvious brogue. A lot of the story seemed clipped in the beginning, but once I familiarized myself with the author’s style and language, I was able to enjoy the story and follow along with this coming of age tale.

Was this review helpful?