Anna Quindlen’s ‘Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake’
Published 5:00 am Sunday, April 29, 2012
“Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake” by Anna Quindlen (Random House, $26)
For most of her nearly 60 years, things have gone really well for writer Anna Quindlen. “When I came to The New York Times as a reporter in 1978, at age 25, I thought I’d been hired because I was aces at my job,” she writes in her new nonfiction book, “Lots of Candles, Plenty of Cake.” “It took me a few months to figure out that a small group of courageous women had sued the paper and that the hiring of a bumper crop of female reporters and editors … was the result.”
That was the beginning of Quindlen’s charmed life, one that led to her enormously popular Times column, “Life in the Thirties”; then more than a dozen bestselling works of nonfiction, fiction and children’s literature; a long, happy marriage with homes in the country and the city; a rewarding speaking career, and, best of all, three healthy, happy, grown children who get along beautifully and enjoy shopping in their mom’s jam-packed attic to furnish their apartments.
Indeed, there are lots of candles and plenty of cake for Quindlen. There is pride and self-acceptance and a wry resignation to the aging process. There are dear girlfriends, beloved pets and welcome times of solitude, and there is the family reading of “A Christmas Carol” every December. Maybe there has never been a perfect figure, but there is great vigor and excellent health to make up for it — these days, she can even do one-armed push-ups and a headstand.
What there is not, oddly enough, is any conflict, or tension or darkness. True, the author’s mother died of cancer when Quindlen was in college, and she might have ended up with a drinking problem, it seems, if she had not had her last beer several decades ago. But largely she has had the biography her nonfiction titles suggest: “Loud and Clear,” “A Short Guide to a Happy Life,” “Being Perfect.”