The “refreshing . . . laugh-out-loud†#1 New York Times bestseller about life in the suburbs that was adapted into a classic film comedy (Kirkus Reviews).
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One day, Tony Award–winning playwright Jean Kerr packed up her four kids (and husband, Walter, one of Broadway’s sharpest critics), and left New York City. They moved to a faraway part of the world that promised a grassy utopia where daisies grew wild and homes were described as neo-gingerbread. In this collection of “wryly observant†essays, Kerr chronicles her new life in this strange land called Larchmont (TheWashington Post).
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It sounds like bliss—no more cramped apartments and nightmarish after-theater cocktail parties where the martinis were never dry enough. Now she has her very own washer/dryer, a garden, choice seats at the hottest new third-grade school plays (low overhead but they’ll never recoup their losses), and a fresh new kind of lunacy.
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In Please Don’t Eat the Daisies “Jean Kerr cooks with laughing gas†as she explores the everyday absurdities, anxieties, and joys of marriage, family, friends, home decorating, and maintaining a career—but this time with a garage! (Time).