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The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits by Jennifer Weiner

Contemporary fiction

The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits

by Jennifer Weiner

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Quick take

Life-shattering fame, forbidden love, and a contentious relationship between pop star sisters: what could go wrong?

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Love_Triangle

    Love triangle

  • Illustrated icon, Salacious

    Salacious

  • Illustrated icon, Music

    Music

  • Illustrated icon, 2000s

    2000s

Synopsis

Cassie and Zoe Grossberg were thrust into the spotlight as The Griffin Sisters, a pop duo that defined the aughts. Together, they skyrocketed to the top, gracing MTV, SNL, and the cover of Rolling Stone. Cassie, a musical genius who never felt at ease in her own skin, preferred to stay in the shadows. Zoe, full of confidence and craving fame, lived for the stage. But fame has a price, and after one turbulent year, the band abruptly broke up.

Now, two decades later, the sisters couldn’t be further apart. Zoe is a suburban mom warning her daughter Cherry to avoid the spotlight, while Cassie has disappeared from public life entirely. But when Cherry begins unearthing the truth behind their breathtaking rise and infamous breakup, long-buried secrets surface, forcing all three women to confront their choices, their desires, and their complicated bonds.

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Get an early look from the first pages of The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits.

The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits

Prologue

Detroit, 2004

“I never should have touched you,” Russell D’Angelo says to the empty room.

He twists the lock, toes off his cowboy boots, and leans his forehead against the hotel-room door, against the framed placard. He’s too close to read the emergency evacuation routes it details, even if his eyes weren’t blurry with tears. He pinches the bridge of his nose, hard. This is an emergency, the worst he’s ever been in, and knowing how to exit the building safely won’t help.

He is thinking about how she looked, about what he’d said.

I never meant for this to happen, he’d told her as she’d glared at him from the hallway, her face shocked and pale and heartbroken. He’d kept talking, hating the pleading sound of his voice. I’m sorry.

Russell shakes his head to stop the thoughts. Three paces bring him to the bar cart. He unscrews the cap of the whiskey bottle and lifts it to his mouth, welcoming the burn of the liquor. His eyes are closed, but he can still see them both. Two sets of eyes, two faces, turned toward his. Different faces, but with the same shape to their lips, the same slope of their cheeks. Two women, waiting for an answer Russell didn’t have.

“I’m an idiot,” he tells the room. And it’s true. He hadn’t even noticed what was happening until it was too late. It wasn’t until he was standing in front of an officiant, thirty of their closest friends, three hundred fellow celebrities, and a photographer from People magazine that he’d looked over his bride’s shoulder and caught her sister’s eyes, and the knowledge of the mistake that he was making hit him like a punch to the breastbone, rattling his heart. “I do,” he’d said. I’m fucked, he’d thought. And from that moment on, a part of him has been waiting, counting down toward this place and this night.

You have to choose, she’d told him. Except there isn’t a choice here. Not really. Not at all.

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Why I love it

When my sister and I were young, we endeavored to form a musical girl group of sorts. After all, we both loved to sing and believed we had innate talent; we assumed the rest would figure itself out. Unfortunately, despite our best efforts, our dream never came to fruition. The same cannot be said for Cassie and Zoe, the sisters and heroines of Jennifer Weiner’s delightful new book, The Griffin Sisters’ Greatest Hits.

Like many sisters, Cassie and Zoe are defined, in large part, by their differences. Zoe is charismatic and ambitious, while Cassie is musically talented but prefers to remain behind the scenes. Set against the backdrop of the early 2000s, the sisters form a pop duo and manage to achieve enormous success—that is, until their band mysteriously breaks apart.

This novel hit all the right notes for me. It evoked my immense nostalgia for a bygone era of pop fervor, while also boldly delving into the complexities and contentions of sisterhood. Despite the fact that I never achieved Pop Princess status, I could deeply relate to these characters and resonated with their journey towards reconciliation. Emotional and addictive in equal measure, this book won’t disappoint.

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