Reviews provided by Syndetics
Publishers Weekly Review
Friedland (The Floating Feldmans) returns with a well-crafted family dramedy centered on a storied Borscht Belt resort, now in its twilight years. The two families who co-own the Golden Hotel have enjoyed a close, if at times complicated, relationship since its founding in 1960 (matriarchs Fanny Weingold and Louise Goldman have never gotten along, and their families have kept their distance after a disastrous Fourth of July barbecue 10 years earlier). With business declining, the families reunite at the resort to consider a sale. Fancy Westchester mom Aimee Goldman-Glasser arrives with her wayward son and uptight daughter, but not her husband, a doctor who was recently arrested for overprescribing Oxycontin. Brian Weingold, a son of the other founding partner, is now the Golden's CEO. Once considered the heartthrob of the Catskills, Brian is somewhat adrift after a nasty divorce. A long-smoldering attraction between Aimee and Brian threatens to erupt, and a prospective developer insinuates that relations between the resort's original founding couples may not have been what they seemed, while Brian's influencer niece tries to market the hotel to millennials. Friedland brings laughs and nuance to the family foibles, and demonstrates a wide range in her convincing narration from the many points of view. Breezy and charming, this is great fun. Agent: Stefanie Lieberman, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (May)
Booklist Review
Friedland brings the legacy of the Catskills to life with her latest novel (after The Floating Feldmans, 2019), where two families must decide the fate of their beloved mountain getaway. When best friends Benny Goldman and Amos Weingold opened their Catskills oasis, the Golden Hotel, in the 1960s, they knew they had something special. The Golden Hotel became a legend not only for the entertainers it hosted but for the memories thousands of families created on its vast estate over the decades. But now Benny is gone and the hotel has been in shambles for years. When an offer is made to purchase the property, with the intention to bulldoze it, the Goldman and Weingold families must decide if it really will be the last summer at the Golden Hotel. Written with Friedland's signature wit and sharp dialogue, Last Summer at the Golden Hotel is an incisive novel that touches on family legacies, nostalgia, and multigenerational dynamics. Readers not content with armchair immersion will want to book their Catskill getaway immediately.
Kirkus Book Review
Secrets and scandals come to light as the last family-owned Catskills resort teeters on the brink of extinction. "Your grandfather was invited to the Oscars by Tony Bennett! So what if the Sullivan County health department gave our kitchen a C last year? We were once in the Guinness Book of World Records for smoking the largest sturgeon in history!" The Golden Hotel, founded in 1960 by Brooklyn College buddies Benny Goldman and Amos Weingold, with its sprawling campus, kidney-shaped pool, loaded dessert cart and name-brand entertainment, was a go-to vacation spot for Jewish families for decades. But the "three A's that sunk the Catskills"--air conditioning, air travel, and assimilation--have taken their toll. All its sibling hotels--Kutshers, the Concord, Grossinger's, the Raleigh, and more--have been demolished or turned into casinos or wellness resorts, and now there's an offer on the table for the Golden, too. Brian Weingold, the current manager of the Golden, calls an emergency meeting of the families to discuss whether or not to sell. By the time the three generations of each family arrive, other dramas are unfolding as well--a doctor husband running a pill mill, a gay son who hasn't come out to his parents, an engagement endangered by snobbery. Both the romantic sparks and competitive snarkery that have always flared when the two families meet are kindled anew. Friedland, who won a following with her cruise-ship novel, The Floating Feldmans (2019), pulls off a similar entertainment coup here. From the perfectly put-together diva grandmother Louise to the Instagram influencer and avocado-toast photographer @free2bephoebe, the ensemble cast is full of comfortably familiar characters, almost every one of them with something they're not tellin'...yet. The vanished history of the Catskills is evoked with love and plenty of schmaltz. A high-spirited party of a book. BYOB: Bring your own borscht. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.