The first trade review for Open Bar (coming August 12) is out, and Kirkus Reviews calls it “A timely and absorbing novel that asks what it costs to tell the truth.” I’m excited to share the full review below, and you can also read it on the Kirkus Reviews site here. All the specific plot details mentioned in the review occur within the first three chapters, so there are no major spoilers.
Schorr’s novel explores issues of power, complicity, and the pursuit of justice in the wake of a campus sexual abuse scandal.
At Mountain Hill University, Serena Stanfield, the director of human resources, uncovers years of buried sexual abuse allegations against a beloved softball coach. When she decides to act, she tells a stunned colleague: “I’m not letting him spend another minute with these girls.” Her moral clarity cuts through the bureaucratic fog of plausible deniability that surrounds her—“Tim won’t save you this time,” she warns the abuser, refusing to be complicit.
In New York, junior corporate investigator Troy Abernathy is trying to stay afloat at a firm where layoffs loom and ethics are optional. When the firm’s celebrity client, bestselling author Caleb Lugo, is accused of sexual assault, Troy is ordered to quietly dig into the accuser’s past.
Meanwhile, in Washington, D.C., city councilwoman Megan Black navigates both public outrage over the campus scandal and a private mission to secure clemency for Evina Jansen, her childhood friend who is serving a life sentence for killing her abusive husband. (“I can’t live like this any longer,” Evina confides.) Megan’s journey underscores the uneven terrain of justice—the ways in which outcomes depend not just on facts, but on who’s watching, who’s connected, and who cares.
Schorr’s prose is clean, fast-moving, and often laced with dark humor. The dialogue feels authentic, especially in tense institutional exchanges and moments of personal crisis. Serena’s confrontation on the softball field is a highlight, cinematic in its timing and righteous energy. While the story is sprawling, the pacing is taut, and the characters’ voices are distinct.
The author avoids easy moral binaries; even well-intentioned characters must face the limits of their choices. The title of the book takes on layered meaning, suggesting not just a high-society gala but also the dangers of unchecked access and what comes through when no one’s watching the door.
A timely and absorbing novel that asks what it costs to tell the truth.
Next Book Club Meeting
Our next Book Club meeting will be on Tuesday, June 17 at 8pm ET, when we’ll discuss North Woods by Daniel Mason. Registration is open here. This novel is described as “A sweeping novel about a single house in the woods of New England, told through the lives of those who inhabit it across the centuries—a daring, moving tale of memory and fate from the Pulitzer Prize finalist and author of The Piano Tuner and The Winter Soldier.”
Feel free to attend even if you don’t have time to read the book before then, and please pass on the info to anyone else who might be interesting in joining!
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What a great review! Totally agree with so much of this, including the authenticity of the characters and the avoidance of moral boundaries. It's a fast-paced and engrossing read that I found almost impossible to put down!
What a fabulous review, Dan! Huge congrats!!!