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OverviewOne of the many well-educated Ivy League graduates with literary ambitions who flock to New York City every year, 25-year-old Melissa Fleischer has the great fortune to work as the assistant to Austin Bloch, an editor responsible for refining and publishing the work of some of America's most esteemed writers. But after she begins working at this prestigious magazine in the late 1970's, Mel soon learns that the extravagantly long lunches her boss indulges in actually belie his affairs with a stream of young women. Mel is left in the distressing position of lying about these never-ending betrayals to Austin's wife, Hillarie, who often calls while he is out of the office. But then, unexpectedly, the New Yorker begins publishing Mel's short stories, offering a spectacular start to what she hopes will be a long and fruitful writing career. Unfortunately, the exhilaration of being published by the magazine she reveres most is soon diminished both by Mel's deeply painful discovery that her own marriage-like Austin's-is far from idyllic, and by her continuing complicity in Austin's betrayals. And nothing seems more difficult than the effort it will take to keep her marriage from falling apart. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Marian ThurmPublisher: Delphinium Books, Inc Imprint: Delphinium Books, Inc Dimensions: Width: 13.90cm , Height: 1.80cm , Length: 20.90cm Weight: 0.381kg ISBN: 9781953002105ISBN 10: 1953002102 Pages: 336 Publication Date: 30 June 2022 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Temporarily unavailable ![]() The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you. Table of ContentsReviewsSparkling . . . [with] a bouncy roman a clef charm. -- Publishers Weekly A juicy roman a clef sympathetically imagines two young women on opposite sides of an extramarital affair. . . . Beautifully written, both sharp and bighearted, funny and true. -- Kirkus, starred review Clever, surprising plots developments abound, and exquisitely drawn characters have their perceptions radically changed when they are forced to confront temptations, conflicts and unexpected challenges. Thurm's literary authority is on full display in this deeply engrossing and dramatically juicy novel. -- Shelf Awareness This is the book I needed and adored. With writing so beautiful; but wait--don't mistake 'beautiful' for 'at the expense of storytelling'--because A Blackmailer's Guide to Love gave me characters so real, so sympathetic, so human, that their good and bad deeds made for compulsive, rewarding, delicious reading. When you can't wait to tell your novel-loving friends about the treat they have in store, that is the test of true book love. -- Elinor Lipman, author of Rachel to the Rescue and Good Riddance If Dorothy Parker had tried writing Fatal Attraction, she might have come up with something like this wonderfully wry roman a clef about New York's overheated literary world in the 70s. Although Marian Thurm is a far more compassionate observer of human nature, and her appealingly troubled characters, by turns funny, touching and unsettling, are completely her own. Through her wide-eyed young heroine, Thurm wonderfully conveys the fantasies, disillusions, and vanities of literary New York in the late 1970s. Her biting sketches of the era's key figures bring that lost world alive in granular detail. Andrea Barrett, author of The Air We Breathe and Archangel Thurm spins a story about love and ambition, and the cost of both, focusing on a desperate-to-be-known writer, her philandering boss, her confused, straying husband, and the wily paramour who's out to blackmail him. Smart, savvy, heartbreakingly funny, and oh so wise, with prose like sparklers on every page. Writers are going to absolutely adore this book, but hey, so will everyone else on the planet. Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Picture of You and With or Without You -- Suzanne Berne, author of The Dogs of Littlefield Through her wide-eyed young heroine, Thurm wonderfully conveys the fantasies, disillusions, and vanities of literary New York in the late 1970s. Her biting sketches of the era's key figures bring that lost world alive in granular detail. -- Andrea Barrett, author of The Air We Breathe and Archangel Thurm spins a story about love and ambition, and the cost of both, focusing on a desperate-to-be-known writer, her philandering boss, her confused, straying husband, and the wily paramour who's out to blackmail him. Smart, savvy, heartbreakingly funny, and oh so wise, with prose like sparklers on every page. Writers are going to absolutely adore this book, but hey, so will everyone else on the planet. -- Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Picture of You and With or Without You A juicy roman a clef sympathetically imagines two young women on opposite sides of an extramarital affair. . . . Beautifully written, both sharp and bighearted, funny and true. --Kirkus, starred review Clever, surprising plots developments abound, and exquisitely drawn characters have their perceptions radically changed when they are forced to confront temptations, conflicts and unexpected challenges. Thurm's literary authority is on full display in this deeply engrossing and dramatically juicy novel.--Shelf Awareness If Dorothy Parker had tried writing Fatal Attraction, she might have come up with something like this wonderfully wry roman a clef about New York's overheated literary world in the 70s. Although Marian Thurm is a far more compassionate observer of human nature, and her appealingly troubled characters, by turns funny, touching and unsettling, are completely her own. Through her wide-eyed young heroine, Thurm wonderfully conveys the fantasies, disillusions, and vanities of literary New York in the late 1970s. Her biting sketches of the era's key figures bring that lost world alive in granular detail. Andrea Barrett, author of The Air We Breathe and Archangel Thurm spins a story about love and ambition, and the cost of both, focusing on a desperate-to-be-known writer, her philandering boss, her confused, straying husband, and the wily paramour who's out to blackmail him. Smart, savvy, heartbreakingly funny, and oh so wise, with prose like sparklers on every page. Writers are going to absolutely adore this book, but hey, so will everyone else on the planet. Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Picture of You and With or Without You--Suzanne Berne, author of The Dogs of Littlefield Sparkling . . . [with] a bouncy roman a clef charm. --Publishers Weekly This is the book I needed and adored. With writing so beautiful; but wait--don't mistake 'beautiful' for 'at the expense of storytelling'--because A Blackmailer's Guide to Love gave me characters so real, so sympathetic, so human, that their good and bad deeds made for compulsive, rewarding, delicious reading. When you can't wait to tell your novel-loving friends about the treat they have in store, that is the test of true book love. --Elinor Lipman, author of Rachel to the Rescue and Good Riddance Through her wide-eyed young heroine, Thurm wonderfully conveys the fantasies, disillusions, and vanities of literary New York in the late 1970s. Her biting sketches of the era's key figures bring that lost world alive in granular detail. --Andrea Barrett, author of The Air We Breathe and Archangel Thurm spins a story about love and ambition, and the cost of both, focusing on a desperate-to-be-known writer, her philandering boss, her confused, straying husband, and the wily paramour who's out to blackmail him. Smart, savvy, heartbreakingly funny, and oh so wise, with prose like sparklers on every page. Writers are going to absolutely adore this book, but hey, so will everyone else on the planet. --Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Picture of You and With or Without You Author InformationMarian Thurm is the author of seven other novels and five short story collections, including Today Is Not Your Day, a New York Times Editors’ Choice. Her novel The Clairvoyant was a New York Times Notable Book. Her short stories have appeared in The New Yorker, The Atlantic, Michigan Quarterly Review, Narrative Magazine, The Southampton Review, and many other magazines, and have been included in The Best American Short Stories, and numerous other anthologies. Her books have been translated into Japanese, Swedish, Dutch, German, and Italian. She has taught creative writing at Yale University and Barnard College, in the MFA programs at Columbia University and Brooklyn College, at the Writing Institute at Sarah Lawrence, and at the Yale Writers’ Workshop. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |