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Book Cover for: Bad Connections, Joyce Johnson

Bad Connections

Joyce Johnson

The award-winning author of Minor Characters writes with delicious transparency about a love that cannot be harnessed and a woman who refuses to be deceived

In the great wave of husband-leaving ushered in by the Sexual Revolution, Molly Held frees herself from her cold, flagrantly unfaithful husband after their final quarrel turns violent. With her five-year-old son, she lights out for an Upper West Side apartment and the new life she hopes to find with Conrad Schwartzberg--the charismatic radical lawyer who has recently become her lover. Having escaped from a desert, she lands in a swamp.

While Conrad radiates positive energy, he is unable to tell Molly--or anyone who loves him--the truth. No longer the wronged wife, Molly now finds herself the Other Woman. She is sharing Conrad with Roberta, another refugee from marriage--with Conrad's movements between the two of them disguised by his suspiciously frequent out-of-own engagements.

Roberta either knows nothing or prefers to look the other way, but Molly's maddening capacity for double vision takes over her mind. What saves her from herself is her well-developed sense of irony, which never fails her--or the reader.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Open Road Integrated Media, Inc.
  • Publish Date: Jun 17th, 2014
  • Pages: 264
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 8.00in - 5.25in - 0.60in - 0.67lb
  • EAN: 9781480481251
  • Categories: Romance - GeneralFamily Life - GeneralPsychological

About the Author

Johnson, Joyce: - Joyce Johnson was born in 1935 in New York City, the setting for all her fiction: Come and Join the Dance, recognized as the first Beat novel by a woman writer, Bad Connections, and In the Night Café. She is best known for her memoir Minor Characters, which won the National Book Critics Circle Award in 1983 and dealt with coming of age in the 1950s and with her involvement with Jack Kerouac. She has published two other Beat-related books: Door Wide Open: A Beat Love Affair in Letters, and The Voice Is All: The Lonely Victory of Jack Kerouac. She has also written a second memoir, Missing Men, and the nonfiction title What Lisa Knew: The Truths and Lies of the Steinberg Case.

More books by Joyce Johnson

Book Cover for: Come and Join the Dance, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Minor Characters: A Beat Memoir, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: In the Night Café, Joyce Johnson
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Book Cover for: Door Wide Open: A Beat Love Affair in Letters, 1957-1958, Jack Kerouac
Book Cover for: Lifetime Memories in Verse, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Oh! 1001 Homemade Dip and Spread Recipes: An One-of-a-kind Homemade Dip and Spread Cookbook, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Oh! 400 Homemade Salsa Recipes: The Homemade Salsa Cookbook for All Things Sweet and Wonderful!, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: The Voice Is All: The Lonely Victory of Jack Kerouac, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Unto Him: Songs of Praise and Encouragement, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Why Sales for Athletes: Lights Out and On Again, Nicholas Williams
Book Cover for: Oh! 1001 Homemade Dip Recipes: Best Homemade Dip Cookbook for Dummies, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Highway One, Joyce Johnson
Book Cover for: Do We Live In Two Worlds?, Joyce Johnson
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Praise for this book

"Ironic, witty and always graceful." --Marilyn French, author of The Women's Room

"Johnson . . . reveals a knack for lyric bitterness." --Kirkus Reviews

"Another superb novel of feminine risk-taking." --Ann Douglas

"[Bad Connections] is controlled, smooth, deftly written: it evokes scene and character with admirable sure swiftness. . . . Joyce Johnson's touches are all true." --Harper's Magazine

"Joyce Johnson is a writer of wit and perception . . . and she has a keen eye for the irony of modern life." --The New York Times Book Review

"Often funny, sometimes cathartically angry, always skillful in rendering the small, excruciating moments that add up to the misery of love gone bad." --The Village Voice

"The new literature of the aggrieved woman has produced something here quite memorable, a sad, beautiful casebook of unrequited love, unrequited humanity." --E. L. Doctorow

"Painfully perceptive, psychologically accurate." --Judith Rossner

"A subtle, witty, rueful tour de force of that strange new territory which all of us now inhabit: modern women's modern lives." --Barbara Probst Solomon