Tales of the City 8 (Tales of the City Series) - Mary Ann in Autumn

ByArmistead Maupin

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Readers` Reviews

★ ★ ★ ★ ★
meagen
I thoroughly enjoyed this book,much more than his last. It was a very fast read and I hated to see it end. Just wish they would do more mini series before the actors are to old or gone. I am hungry for another trip down Barbary Lane.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
j l gillham
Maupin is back, and our beloved denizens of San Francisco are alive and current in the twenty first century. Full of warmth and humor, and bursting with surprises, "Mary Ann in Autumn" is a worthy member of the Tales of the City family.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
vic cui
This is probably mostly for fans if Armistead Maupin's Tales of the City novels. I enjoyed it and thought it was entertaining and well written. This may not be worth reading unless you are really into the series. It probably doesn't stand alone.
Fingersmith by Sarah Waters (2002-02-04) :: The heartwarming Richard and Judy Book Club favourite :: The Little Stranger :: Good Girls Say Yes :: Alternative History Science Fiction (Axis of Time Trilogy)
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
shirin samimi
Like hearing from long, lost friends on Facebook, rediscovering these characters was a surprise and delight, mixed with just a tinge of sadness that the years have passed and we've all grown older. I'd forgotten how much I enjoyed the original books. Can't wait to read The Days of Anna Madrigal.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
melinda caric
Once again Armistead Maupin gives us another wonderful book in the Tales of the City Series. Just as Michael the Mouse has grown older so have his friends. We are treated to Marianne, Anna Madrigal two of our favorites from the original series. A must for all Tales of the City fans.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
vesnick
In the continuing tradition of Maupin the author has provided some answers to past books involving his quiltwork cast of characters. While the book gives us resolutions on some unanswered issues it leaves one begging for more.
It is an easy and enjoyable read.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
kathy hamilton
Just when you think Tales is over, Mr. Maupin comes through with another book. He is just a great story teller, I wish he would continue more often. I enjoyed his beginnings with his column in the "Chronicle" and was thrilled when the novels appeared. A thoroughly enjoyable read - one, two, three times or more.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jagdeep
Just when you think Tales is over, Mr. Maupin comes through with another book. He is just a great story teller, I wish he would continue more often. I enjoyed his beginnings with his column in the "Chronicle" and was thrilled when the novels appeared. A thoroughly enjoyable read - one, two, three times or more.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
codyr72
Such an enjoyable story to read.... just like coming home and seeing old friends... that you haven't seen in a long time.... Armistead does it again.... My only complaint, I finished it in a day.... I was left wanting more more more.......
★ ★ ☆ ☆ ☆
desi
Tales of the City is such an enduring pleasure that one can almost forgive Maupin for milking this tired cow yet one more time, but this is such a sloppy mess of lame contrivances that one can't quite muster the necessary forbearance. I hope he is ready to try a new subject again soon. And he should stop with the tedious digs on Darien--where, unlike San Francisco, gay and lesbian couples can go down to Town Hall, get a license and get married---and maybe even have their openly gay and married State Senator officiate.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
christopher lehmann
"Mary Ann in Autumn" is Armistead Maupin's eighth novel in the "Tales of the City" stories. My suggestion would be, if you're not familiar with this wonderful series, to start at the beginning and read them in order. If you already are famliar with and have read the previous books, then it won't take you long to become very comfortable with what, over the years, have become good friends. Suffice it to say Mary Ann is the catalyst that brings them all together, her story around which it all flows. It's hard to believe most of these characters made their way into book form over thirty years ago. Maupin's charactes have become such good literary friends over those years, and any chance, such as provided by this latest book, to spend time with them once again is a treat indeed.

My first introduction to "Tales of the City" was back in the early 90's, when a friend, an avid reader, passed the first book onto me, suggesting I'd probably enjoy it. And enjoy it I did, promptly, through our local library, seeking out the remaining five books, all then available, in the series, suggesting to other friends that they must read the books, that they were in for a very special experience.

A regret for this fan, and probably for the author, is that, though several of the books made their ways to the screen and were wonderfully cast (imagine...Olympia Dukakis and Laura Linney!), this probably will not be the fate of the remaining books. But Armistead Maupin is such a skilled storyteller that, screen treatment aside, it all comes vividly to life through his writing.

After I had read the first six books, I sent a letter to Maupin, through the books' publisher. I was thrilled to receive the nicest of replies to my "thank you" to him; I remember stating in my letter, "I had never heard of you until my friend had introduced me through the first book." In his letter to me, he said, "Don't apologize. I didn't know who you were either until I received your letter." Over the years I've made a point, now through e-mail addresses if available, of contacting authors whose works, on completion of a book, left me feeling I'd just had the best of reading experiences. Maupin's response to my letter is a treasured one among many I've received from so many authors.

Anyhow, I'm not telling you anything more about "Mary Ann in Autumn" other than, if you've not read the previous books, start at the beginning. And if you are familiar, well, then, this latest brings so much of the gang back for a more than satisfying reading experience.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
jennifer o sullivan
With a creatively appropriate title, MARY ANN IN AUTUMN reads like a letter from a long-lost friend, catching up on 18 years of intrigue. In the true spirit of the Tales of the City series that earned Armistead Maupin fame, this is his eighth. Maupin's masterpiece has sassy insight into all three genders --- and those lost in between --- in the City by the Bay. Welcome back, Mary Ann, "Michael's favorite drama queen!!!"

When Mary Ann "rolled into town with a fresh steaming load of drama, Michael parenthesized his head with his hands." She is now 57, on the lam from her philandering second husband in Connecticut --- and a secret inside that she cannot hide. Point-of-view character Mary Ann Singleton has matured. She now shares the stage with Michael "Mouse" Tolliver's much younger husband, Ben. Does this portend a shift to Ben's POV to take the series into the next three decades?

True to the naiveté of the Mary Ann in Maupin's original newspaper series, she sets up her first Facebook page --- and gets an alarming message, taking her back to true drama that ensnared her roughly 30 years before. "[E]verything around her was familiar but somehow foreign. She was no more a San Franciscan than the doughy woman in a...sweatshirt climbing off the cable car." More shocking than an earthquake, she is no longer an optimistic Pollyanna. Cancer can do that.

Maupin gives the speed-read version, bringing readers up to...well, speed. Mary Ann had married and divorced lothario Brian Hawkins and adopted Connie from Cleveland's daughter, Shawna, who is hauntingly reminiscent of Mona Ramsey. Mary Ann had achieved fleeting TV fame, become estranged from Shawna, and moved back east in the late '80s, where she married über-rich Bob. Integral Anna Madrigal (portrayed by Olympia Dukakis in a three-part miniseries) is now pushing 90 and has had a stroke that cannot flag her spirit, though she is "about to shuffle off this mortal coil."

Now there is gender-bending Jake Greenleaf, Michael's landscaping business partner. Michael is HIV-positive and has wed Ben. DeDe Halcyon has married D'orothea Wilson and is a grandmother! Jake befriends confused Jonah Flake, a Mormon missionary petitioning for California's Proposition 8. Sex blogger Shawna and friend Otto meet "a homeless woman in a dirty red tracksuit." Seemingly unimportant, she becomes as prominent as Lombard Street.

What appears to be Maupin's mishmash of "capital-F Friends" is more like an intricate jigsaw puzzle with interlocking pieces: Take out one and the picture is incomplete. Mystery and intrigue tie tangential characters together like twine. And there's a kick-in-the-crotch ending that could not have been anticipated.

In a poignant discussion about fidelity in marriage, and his ambiguous vows with Ben, Michael tells Mary Ann: "If monogamy becomes more important than fidelity, you're bound to get hurt. It's all the lying that clobbers you, not the sex. [H]aving to keep something secret can drive a huge wedge between you."

Maupin works magic; he made me feel young again, flashing back to the days of 28 Barbary Lane. Like so many brilliantly colored ribbons, Maupin ties his characters into a beautiful bow, to decorate this perfect gift for the holidays. With writing as rich as San Francisco's Golden Era, this tale of the city strikes the mother lode.

--- Reviewed by L. Dean Murphy
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
deepak nare
My race through the original six books that make up TALES OF THE CITY can only be described as a reading orgy. I think I went through them all in a week. Then, some years ago I read book #7 before losing track of Armistead Maupin. When I discovered he had written two more books in the series, I decided to save them for a vacation treat.

I went through Mary Ann in Autumn during the first day of vacation, once again enchanted by the characters of Mary Ann, Mouse, and Anna Madrigal. There was Maupin's same easy, conversational style and humor and the same knack for capturing precisely what makes the baby boomer generation (including me) both distinctive and ridiculous.

Now well into middle age, Mary Ann is facing multiple crises -- both personal and health-- when she once again turns to her good friend Michael (aka Mouse) for support. There are some new characters, representing the continuum of sexual identity, all of whom wind up being strangely interconnected in the small town of San Francisco. If you're a baby boomer, this is a MUST read.
★ ★ ★ ★ ★
farzad
Michael Tolliver, Mary Ann Singleton and the divine Mrs. Anna Madrigal are back after we last saw them in MICHAEL TOLLIVER LIVES. They of course are older-- Michael and Mary Ann are fifty-seven, each with grey hair now. Mouse, a long time survivor of HIV, has a gut (lipodystrophy) because of his medications. Mary Ann, faced with two major life crises, returns to San Franciso into the arms of her "logical" as opposed to "biological" family. Mrs. Madrigal is fragile as only the very old are. Reuniting with these and other returning characters from Maupin's previous seven TALES OF THE CITY novels is pure pleasure. The author also introduces several new characters just as "messed up"-- some considerably more so than our old friends.

This novel, like all the previous ones, is firmly placed in the here and now: the events take place after the election of President Obama and the defeat of Proposition 8 in California. There are references to Hillary Clinton, Hurricane Katrina and Conan O'Brien. And for us old-timers, Maupin dredges from the past John Denver's "Country Roads" and Claudine Longet, the ex-wife of Andy Williams, who shot her ski-bum boyfriend Spider in Aspen, Colordado way back in the 1970's. The author gets his licks in against the Mormon Chuch's efforts that helped defeat Proposition 8 through the character of one Jonah Flake (aptly named), a sad, misguided young Mormon missionary. In his quiet, clever way, Maupin sounds a note for intergenerational relationships and the transgendered community. Because of Mrs. Madrigal and Michael's colleague Jake, Shawna Hawkins says she is compelled "to live in the genderless neutrality of the human heart."

Since we are all quietly aging here, MARY ANN IN AUTUMN has a bittersweet autumnal edge to it: Mary Ann opines that "It all goes so fast. . . We dole out our lives in dinner parties and plane flights, and it's over before we know it. We lose everyone we love, if they don't lose us first, and every single thing we do is intended to distract us from tha reality." (Didn't one of Thornton Wilder's characters, the stage manager, in "Our Town" say something similar and T. S. Eliot's Prufrock as well?) And another character reminds us that "we still have the moment. That's all anybody has." On the other hand, on a much lighter note, surely only Mr. Maupin, the grand master of detail, would mention the half-moon paper on a toilet seat.

Finally MARY ANN IN AUTUMN is the writer's continuing valentine to that city of cities, San Francisco, which for many of us is our Jerusalem.

I finished this warm, delightful book in one evening, a perfect and fitting way to begin the month of November.
★ ★ ★ ★ ☆
veronika777
'Mary Ann in Autumn' is yet another installment of 'Tales of the City' series. And it delivers what you'd expect: well drawn characters, excellent writing and giving the reader a feel for life in San Francisco. The story itself is a collection of interwoven vignettes surrounding Mary Ann's return to San Francisco. It is largely forgettable, but fans of this book series seem to be more in love with the characters than whatever the plot might offer. Conversely if you have not read the entire series prior to this book then you will not fully appreciate it.

Bottom line: a trifling addition to the series that will not disappoint its many fans. Recommended.
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