Books That Made a Difference to Kyra Sedgwick
From Charles Dickens to Rebecca Miller—with stops at Kundera, Salinger,
and Irving—the Closer star handpicks her dream library.

About four years ago, a friend gave me a copy of Victoria Redel's novelLoverboy. I was haunted by this story of a woman who is a wildly exciting mother who creates this magical
childhood for her son. She makes a game out of everything and opens up to him a world that is mysterious and wondrous—and
exclusively theirs.
I kept thinking, Oh God, I wish I could have been this kind of mother. I got married and had a child when I was really young. It would have been the most wonderful thing
never to have wanted to work again, to be totally satisfied just to be a parent.
Near the end of the book, the
boy turns 6 and he's ready to start school. She can't imagine letting him go into the world to be mediocre, to be normal,
to be hatefully middle of the road. Then you realize she's taken her own life and her son's.
I was so
stunned. For almost three-quarters of the book, I had envied this character's devotion to her son, and she winds up committing
this horrible act. But she believed she was taking care of her child—and that's a universal theme of parenting. It's
hard for anyone to see their children get older and become more independent.
This story was so dark, but I
couldn't stop thinking about it. I said to my husband [Kevin Bacon], "You should read this." He saw it in a visual way and
said, "Let's see if we can get the film rights." (We did; Kevin directed the movie, and I played the mother.) It's a beautiful
book—one you can't put down. I feel the same about the five on my list.
Kyra Sedgwick
stars in Loverboy, and The Closer.
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SOME
REVIEWS FOR THE NOVEL:
“A
first novel that explores a mother’s obsession; in prose at once lyrical
and chillingly realistic, it catches the reader up in a tightening
circle of the fleeting delights and accumulating dangers of her
misguided intimacy.” —ELLE
“Cryptic…
authoritative and vast—full of suspense, emotional urgency,and
shimmering imagery…. A nightmare tale of mother-love strong enough to
swallow a child whole.” —Voice Literary Supplement
“Redel
is one of the most talented scary writers to come out of musty old Manhattan in
the last few decades.” —Los Angeles Times Book Review
“Daring.”
—Vanity Fair
“A
spare and stunning debut whose lean, episodic style seems perfectly adapted to
its subject matter….Perfect.” —San Francisco Chronicle
“A
controlled and convincing tale of a mother’s obsession for her child….
Painting a convincing portrait of her complex and surprising sympathetic
narrator, Redel makes it possible to empathize with the woman’s
overwhelming love for her son: the novel succeeds because the reader
cannot condemn her.” —Publishers Weekly
“Fascinating
and disconcerting; you’ll find yourself simultaneously empathizing
with this mother’s love for her son and being horrified by her
obsession with keeping him all to herself.” —Redbook
“Redel
writes like an angel about the darkest edge of obsession. This debut is simply
excellent. Highly recommended.” —Library Journal
“Loverboy
is stunningly fine….More Redel, please, and soon.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
“Redel
brings a fresh, new voice to the world of fiction and peoples it with haunting characters.”
—Times Daily
“This
novel dares to look into the darkest corners of a mother’s heart and
at the detrimental shadows cast by all-encompassing maternal love.”—Booklist
“Loverboy
is a novel of extremes, and Redel is to be applauded for her
relentlessness….This is
some
very potent stuff.” —Review of Contemporary Fiction
Reading Redel's debut novel is not unlike hearing a single-line piano piece
repeat a short section over and over in seemingly melodious fashion until one of the notes steps out of tune, then another
until the entire piece is jarringly discordant. A brilliant example of the consuming obsession that can be a mother's relationship
to her child taken to disturbing heights.