‘Colwin is a bard of burgeoning adulthood’ New Yorker
Polly has been the house pet to several families: friendly, cheerful, good with children, happy to bask in the domesticity of other people’s lives – until she meets Gilbert.
Cordy, raised with the spartan, pleasure-rejecting habits of the very rich, cannot stomach the pleasures of his beloved Jane’s cooking, her lavender soap, her adoration.
And Ann, the perpetually stoned young wife of a popular college professor, tries to find the courage to tell her husband that she’s been high since the day they met.
Humorous, tender and moving, here are tales of love and desire in all its forms, with each story told in Laurie Colwin’s irresistible, inimitable style.
A W&N Essential
Polly has been the house pet to several families: friendly, cheerful, good with children, happy to bask in the domesticity of other people’s lives – until she meets Gilbert.
Cordy, raised with the spartan, pleasure-rejecting habits of the very rich, cannot stomach the pleasures of his beloved Jane’s cooking, her lavender soap, her adoration.
And Ann, the perpetually stoned young wife of a popular college professor, tries to find the courage to tell her husband that she’s been high since the day they met.
Humorous, tender and moving, here are tales of love and desire in all its forms, with each story told in Laurie Colwin’s irresistible, inimitable style.
A W&N Essential
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Reviews
An infallible recipe for happiness: read as much Laurie Colwin as you can
Colwin is a bard of burgeoning adulthood
Colwin loves her characters and reveals them as clearly in joy as other authors do in anguish
One reads with fascination the steps by which lovers stumble upon their forthright declarations
Colwin's writing remains as fresh as asparagus, as reliable as roast chicken