Desperate Characters - Paula Fox
KORTE INHOUD
Otto and Sophie Bentwood live in a changing neighborhood in Brooklyn. Their stainless-steel kitchen is newly installed, and their Mercedes is parked curbside. After Sophie is bitten on the hand while trying to feed a stray, perhaps rabies-infected cat, a series of small and ominous disasters begin to plague the Bentwoods' lives, revealing the fault lines and fractures in a marriage-and a society-wrenching itself apart. First published in 1970 to wide acclaim, Desperate Characters stands as one of the most dazzling and rigorous examples of the storyteller's craft in postwar American literature - a novel that, according to Irving Howe, ranks with Billy Budd, The Great Gatsby, Miss Lonelyhearts, and Seize the Day.
"Using a merciless camera's-eye, Paula Fox... spreads problems before the reader and makes no recommendation...The skillful insistency with which Miss Fox probes her character's lives holds one's attention."
(Peter Rowley, New York Times Book Review)
"BRILLIANT...Fox is one of the most attractive writers ...
"Using a merciless camera's-eye, Paula Fox... spreads problems before the reader and makes no recommendation...The skillful insistency with which Miss Fox probes her character's lives holds one's attention."
(Peter Rowley, New York Times Book Review)
"BRILLIANT...Fox is one of the most attractive writers ...