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Bette Pesetsky

Auteur de Author from a Savage People

7+ oeuvres 114 utilisateurs 3 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

Writer and educator Bette Pesetsky graduated from the University of Iowa Writers Workshop. She has written several novels and two collections of short stories. Her stories have appeared The New Yorker, Paris Review and Ontario Review. All her books have been listed as Notable Books of the New York afficher plus Times, and one, Midnight Sweets, was named one of the five best novels of 1987 by the Los Angeles Times. (Bowker Author Biography) afficher moins

Œuvres de Bette Pesetsky

Author from a Savage People (1983) 34 exemplaires
Digs (1984) 21 exemplaires
The Late Night Muse (1991) 19 exemplaires
Stories up to a point (1982) 14 exemplaires
Cast a Spell (1993) 11 exemplaires
Midnight Sweets (1988) 9 exemplaires
Confessions of A Bad Girl (1989) 6 exemplaires

Oeuvres associées

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Sexe
female

Membres

Critiques

I randomly picked this up at a used bookstore in Salt Lake City to read on my flight back home. Little did I know that I had just accidentally discovered a forgotten minor masterpiece. Crisply written, very funny, and packing a biting feminist subtext. Pity that it's out of print.
 
Signalé
giovannigf | 2 autres critiques | Jun 25, 2014 |
staat vast al 20 jaar in mijn kast. Onlangs weer gelezen. Het blijft leuk!
 
Signalé
Henniesbieb | 2 autres critiques | Jan 9, 2010 |
May Alto is raising three children in New York City, supporting the family as a ghostwriter. She makes enough that they live comfortably, even though their father, May’s ex, receives not-infrequent handouts (not to mention occasional sex). Her friends keep telling her to get a real job, one that makes her leave the house and work with other people. It is when one of her clients is awarded the Nobel Prize for work she wrote that May seems to begin to come undone; she blackmails him, demanding the entire amount of his prize.

May’s dilemma is an intriguing one; she has done work in a wide variety of fields, while all the recognition goes to others. I found it difficult to be certain how much she had actually written; her reach seems so wide as to be implausible, if only in terms of her output, and I found myself wondering if she was delusional. That impression was enhanced by the surreal, half-hidden quality of the storytelling. I found that quality off-putting, along with the ambiguity of the ending. Still, the questions raised are compelling. Is May’s psychiatrist right to reject books he previously loved once he finds out May actually wrote them—because they are not “authentic”? Considering that many of them are already famous, such that the recognition the work receives is a summation of their pre-existing fame and the work itself, is May being “used”? Or are these deals simply a way to combine May’s skills with the fame of the client?
… (plus d'informations)
½
 
Signalé
jholcomb | 2 autres critiques | Nov 16, 2008 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
7
Aussi par
1
Membres
114
Popularité
#171,985
Évaluation
3.9
Critiques
3
ISBN
19
Langues
1

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