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The Good Life
Jay McInerney
€ 12.99
€ 5.47
FREE Delivery in Ireland
Description for The Good Life
Paperback. Num Pages: 368 pages. BIC Classification: FA. Category: (G) General (US: Trade). Dimension: 130 x 198 x 26. Weight in Grams: 254.
Ten years on from Brightness Falls, Russell Calloway is still a literary editor; his wife Corrine has sacrificed her career to watch anxiously over their children. Across town Luke McGavock, a wealthy ex-investment banker, is taking a sabbatical from moneymaking, struggling to reconnect with his socially resplendent wife Sasha and their angst-ridden teenage daughter, Ashley. These two Manhattan families are teetering on the brink of change when 9/11 happens. Through the lens of catastrophe, The Good Life explores that territory between hope and despair, love and loss, regret and fulfilment. This is Jay McInerney doing what he does best, presenting us with life in New York City, in all its moral complexity.
Product Details
Format
Paperback
Publication date
2016
Publisher
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Condition
New
Number of Pages
368
Place of Publication
London, United Kingdom
ISBN
9781408876961
SKU
9781408876961
Shipping Time
Usually ships in 2 to 4 working days
Ref
99-2
About Jay McInerney
Jay McInerney came to prominence in 1984 with his first novel Bright Lights, Big City. He is the author of six further novels: Ransom, Story of My Life, Brightness Falls, The Last of the Savages, Model Behaviour and The Good Life, two short story collections, and two non-fiction books on wine, one of which was the acclaimed A Hedonist in the Cellar. He writes a wine column for the Wall Street Journal and is a regular contributor to the Guardian, the New York Times Book Review and Corriere della Sera. He lives in Manhattan and Bridgehampton, New York.
Reviews for The Good Life
`This story is a simple one, but McInerney delivers it with grace and wit. He does what a good novelist should: he takes an abstract idea and gives it life'
Alain de Botton
A shrewd, acidic portrait of literary life in Manhattan at the turn of this already frightful century
Guardian
Engrossing from start to finish, this compassionate novel depicts a very human response to tragedy
Mail on Sunday
McInerney's most fully imagined novel as it is his most ambitious and elegiac
New York Review of Books
`The subject of The Good Life is the cataclysm of 9/11, and McInerney lays claim to it with the authority and conviction of a native master ... McInerney here joins a small number of dissident novelists, headed by Norman Mailer, who change the way we look at American history'
Sunday Telegraph
`While those who read and fell in love with Brightness Falls all those years ago will devour The Good Life with relish, this is something which will appeal to those who have never read him before'
Irish Independent
`Moving, thoughtful and altogether surprising in its portrayal of passion thwarted by circumstance, of all the 9/11 books this is possibly the only one that will pass the test of time'
Arena
A beautiful, affecting novel, one of the best yet inspired by 9/11
Sunday Telegraph
Alain de Botton
A shrewd, acidic portrait of literary life in Manhattan at the turn of this already frightful century
Guardian
Engrossing from start to finish, this compassionate novel depicts a very human response to tragedy
Mail on Sunday
McInerney's most fully imagined novel as it is his most ambitious and elegiac
New York Review of Books
`The subject of The Good Life is the cataclysm of 9/11, and McInerney lays claim to it with the authority and conviction of a native master ... McInerney here joins a small number of dissident novelists, headed by Norman Mailer, who change the way we look at American history'
Sunday Telegraph
`While those who read and fell in love with Brightness Falls all those years ago will devour The Good Life with relish, this is something which will appeal to those who have never read him before'
Irish Independent
`Moving, thoughtful and altogether surprising in its portrayal of passion thwarted by circumstance, of all the 9/11 books this is possibly the only one that will pass the test of time'
Arena
A beautiful, affecting novel, one of the best yet inspired by 9/11
Sunday Telegraph