Member Reviews
The Dinner List answers the classic question, if you could dine with 5 people, living or dead, who would you choose? Sabrina chooses her best friend, Jessica, her late father, Robert (who left her and her mother when she was 5 years old), her favorite college professor, Conrad, her ex-fiancee, Tobias, and ... ummmm ... the late Audrey Hepburn.
As the story alternates between the dinner and Sabrina's relationship with Tobias, the reader finds out more about Sabrina's often tumultuous relationships with all of these characters. Even though some of the characters at the dinner are alive and some are dead, I never questioned the plausibility because the story itself was riveting. What if you could solve your life's biggest questions and regrets in one very long, very honest dinner conversation between the five most pivotal people in your life? Read about Sabrina's life changing dinner party in this sweet, quick, and engaging read!
I received an advance copy. All opinions are my own.
Location: Los Angeles, California and New York City
It’s a familar party game. Put your five favorite people, living or dead, on your Dinner List. This book speculates on what would happen if the dinner actually occurred.
Sabrina arrives at her thirtieth birthday dinner at a trendy restaurant. Seated at the table are the five guests she named. Audrey Hepburn, her college philosophy Professor Conrad, her ex-boyfriend Tobias, her estranged father Robert, and her college best friend Jessica are all relaxed and not surprised to be at dinner together. Sabrina is worried that she is either insane or dreaming.
During dinner, flashbacks show the history Sabrina has with these people and why they were added to her dinner list. However, the focus is Sabrina and Tobias’ relationship and why it ended.
I love the magical realism genre (I’m looking at you Haruki Murakami). This book has a magical atmosphere in a more realistic setting. It was innovative of the author to use an old party game as a plot driver. The conclusion is heartfelt and felt organic to the characters. Be aware that the Dinner List is sad in parts. Several of the dinner guests are dead so any revelations will be ultimately bittersweet with the knowledge unusable after the dinner ends. The Dinner List is highly recommended for fans of Me Before You and the Fault in our Stars. 5 stars!
Thanks to Flatiron Books and NetGalley for an advance copy.
Sabrina and her college roomate Jessica long ago made a list: what five people would you most want to have dinner with? Sabrina chooses her boyfriend Tobias, her favorite college professor Conrad, her estranged father, Robert, who abandoned her and her mother as a child, her bff who has kind of disappeared since getting married and having her first child, and Audrey Hepburn.
Sabrina never suspected she would really get an opportunity to have that dinner, but the impossible has happened, and they are all there to help Sabrina. After the wonder wears off of being in Audrey Hepburn’s presence, she slowly unravels the last few years of college and starting her career, as well as her on and off relationship with her boyfriend, her best friend moving away from NYC to Connecticut, and why her alcoholic father could recover for love of another family, but not hers. They have only one night together to figure out why they're all there at dinner and solve whatever lies unresolved in Sabrina's mind.
Told in past and present with just enough answers at a time to keep you guessing and wanting to read more, The Dinner List is a fascinating answer to many questions about the past and present, and how to overcome tragedies that feel like the end of the world.
It’s a question often asked as an icebreaker, or perhaps on one of those online personality quizzes - “If you could invite any five people to dinner, dead or alive, who would you choose?” Some of us pick celebrities, others invite family and friends; Sabrina, protagonist of Rebecca Serle’s The Dinner List, selects none other than Audrey Hepburn, her college professor, the father she never knew, her best friend, and her ex.
What makes Sabrina’s choices more crucial than the rest of ours (we are, after all, just playing this game for fun), is that Sabrina’s dinner party actually happens. When Sabrina arrives for her thirtieth birthday dinner, these five people are seated at her table, waiting to celebrate. Just why Sabrina chose these five people, and why they are important to her life is the premise behind Serle’s novel.
The Dinner List is a nonlinear story alternating between present day, the dinner, and the past, which explains how Sabrina and her five dinner guests got to this point. As the night goes on, details are slowly revealed about Sabrina’s relationship with her father; why Jessica, her best friend, and Sabrina’s relationship is so tense; and what happened to end things between Sabrina and Tobias, her ex. These topics, among others, are offered up as dinner conversation, and the finer points are hashed out among the guests.
While the premise of The Dinner List is surely entertaining, Sabrina’s selections indicate that this isn’t going to be some happy-go-lucky celebratory meal. Instead, The Dinner List explores the demise of several integral relationships in Sabrina’s life, making for a rather unexpected heavy read. There is little to smile and laugh about here, but if you’re a reader who enjoys people studies and exploring how all of the moments in one’s life make the person, then you’ll likely find The Dinner List to be an intriguing read. On the other hand, if you were expecting this book to be a laugh-out-loud side tickler about what happens when you get a bunch of characters together for an unexpected dinner, you may need to look elsewhere.
Personally, what I enjoyed most about The Dinner List is the parts detailing Sabrina and Tobias’s relationship. We get to see the entire arc of the relationship, from meeting to breaking up. The Dinner List is a refreshing love story in that it isn’t a happy love story. Sabrina and Tobias have a lot of problems that they struggle to work out. This novel serves as a reminder that timing and circumstance sometimes sadly make or break a relationship more than the love, or lack thereof, between two people ever could.
This was a fun book and I loved all of the characters at the dinner table. I loved the parts that were in the restaurant, the conversation flowed like it could be current meal in any family (drama included)The flashbacks were well done and I enjoyed seeing Sabrina change and her progression over time with the relationships. This was the perfect amount of seriousness but with humor as well. I will recommend this fun read!
I was very intrigued by the description and heard about this book everywhere, so I was expecting to love it. I thought it was just okay. A tad slow in parts and a kind of odd concept of having a birthday dinner with those both alive and dead. I did enjoy the love story between two of the main characters and the writing was well done .
Who are five people, living or dead, that you would want to have dinner with? It's a question I'd bet most people have asked or been asked, not actually thinking it would happen, but just to get conversation started whether at a party or just out for drinks or sitting at home.
Well, when Sabrina arrives at her thirtieth birthday dinner she is greeted with her list: her friend Jesssica, her former college Professor, her estranged father Robert, her ex-boyfriend Tobias, and Audrey Hepburn.
What unfolds is a very thought-provoking, yet easily accessible story about the relationships we have (friendships, familial, and romantic) and the ups and downs that occur as we, as individuals, grow and experience life and sometimes how things that happen in our lives prevent us from moving forward, or makes us scared of history repeating itself.
Right away, especially with the inclusion of Audrey Hepburn, you wonder what exactly is going on. That need to figure it out propels the story forward. When you realize there's the whole fairytale-esque "ending at midnight" stipulation, the pacing is catapulted forward even quicker as Sabrina tries to, basically, figure out her life. Why things between her and Jessica have been strained, why could she never reconcile with her father, what his leaving did to her and how it effects her to this day, and most especially where her relationship with Tobias went wrong and can she fix it?
It's a cleverly built story and Rebecca Serle throws in a somewhat unexpected twist near the half-way mark that even further ratchets up the mystery of how Sabrina can be having a dinner with these particular people and what it all means for Sabrina's self-discovery.
I won't say too much more because it's definitely a book that's best read with some surprises, but I thought it was at times magical yet real, heartbreaking yet hopeful.
For Sabrina's 30th birthday, she finds herself having dinner with five significant people: her best friend, three very important people from her past and Audrey Hepburn. I love this premise and found the dinner scenes themselves very charming for the most part. Besides her best friend and Audrey, Sabrina found herself sitting down with her deceased father, her college professor and her one true love, Tobias. Needless to say, Sabrina has baggage along with past issues to reconcile with everyone at the table except Audrey who, honestly, seemed a little blasé most of the story. I was engaged with these dinner scenes, particularly the conversations between Sabrina and Tobias and Sabrina and her best friend...much tension could be felt.
However, and this is a big however for me, the dinner scenes were interspersed with something I often have issues with...flashbacks. Just when it felt like we were at a crucial part of the dinner discussion or when tension between people was high, we were taken back in time to retrace the love affair of Sabrina and Tobias. I will admit...this led to skimming on my part because I wanted to return to the dinner scenes. There was an underlying hint that there was more to the dinner interactions than meets the eye. Was I surprised by what that turned out to be? Unfortunately no, it ended up being as I predicted which really bummed me out because I love to be surprised. Overall, this was a light, easy read.
A delightful premise that will have you naming your own 5 dinner guests. This is Sabrina’s dinner party on her birthday. She has invited her estranged father Robert, her significant other of 9 years, Tobias, her BFF, Jessica, Her college professor and Audrey Hepburn. They are all there for a reason. To help Sabrina put to rest the past and move on with her life.
This book is a compelling read and I could not put it down until I had finished the last page. It is a book about family, romance, and friends. It is also about expectations and dashed hopes. It only gets a 4-star rating because I really can't figure out why Audrey Hepburn is in the book in spite of Sabrina and her fathers' enjoyment of her films. I recommend this book but have a box of tissues handy.
My Five: My Great Grandfathers, August and Frederick (German immigrants in the 19th century), Lisa Kleypas (favorite author), my Mom (because I miss her), Steve Martin (Every dinner party needs someone to tell a joke). I expect this list will change the more I think about it.
I'd like Audrey Hepburn to come to my house for dinner too! Sabrina (get it) is living out her must do when she has her dad, her ex, her best friend, a college professor AND Audrey Hepburn for her 30th birthday dinner. Given that not all of these people are, ahem, alive, is what makes this more interesting. Sabrina's tale of love, regret, and wishes is told through these relationships, some of which are more reflective than others. That she's only 30 (I know, it seems old to many) makes me wonder how she would interact with these people if she were 40 or 50. Thanks to Netgalley for the ARC. It's a good read with a solid heart to it.
This is such an interesting concept - I think we've all flippantly decided to scribble down who our people we'd ask to dinner would be, but similarly to this book we've never considered how well they would get along with each other. Oops. Dramatic new adult tinged with pockets of levity thanks to Audrey Hepburn's fun appearance, this makes for a thought provoking read for anyone who's ever made their own dinner list.
Incredibly sad, an yet I didn't cry. My sympathy for the characters was underdeveloped because I found them to be unbelievably immature. Also, I could have done without all the bs about the afterlife. Still a heartwarming read, and definitely one to make you think. I am sure book clubs will be devouring this one.
I had heard people talk about this book on instagram and decided to try it. I really enjoywd this book. I loved the interactions with the characters. I really felt like i was there in the story. It had many sad parts but i loved that sabrina was able to have closure with all of the people she invited to her dinner.
I heard about this novel last month. It sounded great, because who hasn't made a "five people I'd invite for dinner" list before? The only thing that made me hesitate at first was the "magical realism" in the description.
It took me quite a while to get into this novel, and with school starting, my reading time was limited to evenings. However, I pushed through to finish it this weekend because it really captured me about halfway through.
Magical realism aside, I think more of what is needed is "willful suspension of disbelief." Maybe it really is more “magical realism” as the description states, because how else can you have the narrator's deceased father and Audrey Hepburn there? There is a revelation about halfway through that was a turning point for me: Do I press on and continue, or do I quit? That is how much it upset me. However, I persisted, pushed through, and finished. I'm glad I did.
The author's alternating chapter style really works. And after the first several chapters, the continual dialogue around the dinner table doesn't feel as forced or as dialogue-y as before. She does an amazing job of delving deep into these characters' motivations and desires.
I liked how the book made me think of romantic relationships, what is socially expected, what others expect of us, and what we expect of the other person in the relationship. Very interesting and I'll be pondering it for a while.
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Thanks to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for an ebook review copy.
FTC Disclosure: I received a copy of this book on NetGalley for review. All opinions are my own.
I was so excited to read The Dinner List because the concept seemed so interesting. I think many of us have been posed the question, if you could have dinner with 5 people living or dead who would they be? This book takes that question and helps paint a picture of what that might be like. Sabrina has this happen to her in the book at her 30th birthday dinner. There is only one famous person in the mix, Audrey Hepburn, but she ties together several of the people in Sabrina's life and makes the story more interesting to boot, She may have been my favorite part of the book! The Dinner List explores several key relationships in Sabrina's life- her relationship with her estranged father, her best friend who she seems to have lost her connection with, and the love of her life, Tobias, and the struggles they went through and what happened that ultimately lead to their parting. The book is heartbreaking and romantic and keeps you turning page after page to see what exactly happened in all of these relationships. I recommend this book to anyone who wants to read something refreshing and new or who enjoys contemporary literature.
I didn't love my other foray into the work of Rebecca Serle, but the adult fiction shift for this story definitely appealed to me. The overall concept of the book - actually having that "who are the five people you'd want to have dinner with - dead or alive?" dinner - fascinated me. How would the story be written? Would we get background information about all of the people? It ended up alternating chapters between this dinner and a timeline of her relationship with Tobias. The five people she chose to meet with are Audrey Hepburn, her father (who wasn't a part of her life) Robert, Tobias, her favorite professor Conrad, and her old roommate Jessica. They all talk about different topics while always heading back to the relationship between Tobias and Sabrina.
There was a surprising twist in the middle of the book that really set things in motion; the first half was a slow build. For a book that focused deeply on characters instead of plot, I didn't feel completely connected to the main couple. It showed their ugly parts and really dove deep into their relationship, which I appreciated, but I never fully shipped them as a result. Was I supposed to ship them anyways? It's hard to tell.
“You act like being with him is winning some kind of prize,” Jessica would say to me later—much later. “That’s not what relationships are about.”
But weren’t they? Wasn’t love about feeling like the luckiest woman on the planet? Wasn’t it feeling like the whole world was conspiring for your happiness, and yours alone? (ARC, 31%)
The chapters were short and went back and forth quite frequently, which made it a quick and easy read. I think some of the writing (and characters) were too pretentious for my tastes overall. There were a lot of deep life lessons and topics being discussed, which is fair given the premise of the story, but I just felt like they were trying to hard to be meaningful. I can sniff that out a little too quickly in books though. This had a very ~literary fiction~ kind of feel, which isn't my jam most of the time.
I have to give this a good rating overall because I enjoyed the experience of reading it. This should definitely be a movie, in the same vein as The Five People You Meet in Heaven. Seeing how someone like Audrey Hepburn would interact with your father or your favorite college professor would be fascinating, and that whole element was discussed quite a bit.
Based on the blurb for this book, I was expecting something light and maybe humorous. This is not that novel. Instead, the magical realism that is the premise (out of the blue, your dinner list, dead and alive show up at dinner) happens without any explanation or further magical elements. The dead are going to stay dead when dinner is over. The dinner itself focuses far more on the un-famous persons on "the list" rather than the famous. And, ultimately, the entire dinner recounts a relationship the narrator has with a former boyfriend. All in all, a disappointment for me with a cast that includes Audrey Hepburn, (but, it should be noted, no other celebrity guests).
This is a creative story of life, love, and second chances. At first, I was not sure this was a book for me; admittedly, I tend towards the dark, dramatic, historical, tragic tales, but the premise of this novel is intriguing. Based on a classic conversation in every classroom I've ever led, the question begins with "Who would you invite to dinner, dead or alive, fiction or non-fiction, if you could?" This was always the start of some fascinating English lit class discussions. In Rebecca Serle's book, she tips it a bit towards family and friends, and away from famous and historical. At first, the literary snob in me was put off - where was Shakespeare, Homer, or yes, even Harry Potter? Why do I want to read about a dinner with Sabrina's old college professor, ex-boyfriend, best friend, dead father, and the obligatory famous person, Audrey Hepburn? Ah, the answer is because Serle makes me care. This story wraps itself insidiously around your heart as once again I was reminded that life is not fame and fortune, but the small moments...like when you first see the love of your life, the first apartment with your best friend, a night with a new baby, etc. I thoroughly enjoyed this short, sweet little story.
I adored this book! I loved the unique plot on an age old question. Sabrina was so likable and real. I was drawn in to the alternating chapters and the honest conversation. This was the perfect book to end summer vacation with and it will be a fantastic book club selection. So many good conversations to be had! I love that not everything is a happy ending but I loved the ending all the same. Fun, charming book!!
Maybe reading this as you're dropping your only kid at college isn't a good thing.... My Facebook book club (Bitter is the New Book Club) raved about it and I loved the premise but I think this is a true case of "Its not you - its me" as I was more emotional than a menopausal woman having 12 hot flashes at once as I got my only daughter off to college 2000 miles from home while reading the book.
Of course this book conjures up the question of who would I have at my dinner party? Honestly, I think I would just want to spend an hour each with the three grandparents I had growing up.. I realize now that I didn't appreciate all of their amazing stories now as an adult with a child of my own. No food, just 60 minutes of focusing on three people who loved me unconditionally.
Here I go again - an emotional hot flash..Better get back to the book....
Yes - this book is beautifully written, super funny at times and will tug at the heart strings as you think about the past, present and future. I think I will need to re-read it again . Rebecca Serle has an amazing talent on weaving a beautiful story - I think she will be an author to watch.