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J. Eden: A Novel
  
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J. Eden: A Novel [Hardcover]

Kit Reed (Author)

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Book Description

Hardscrabble Books-Fiction of New England February 1, 1996
The 90s myth of perfection collides with the realities of human frailty.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Four New York families share a milestone summer in a New England country farmhouse in Reed's (Catholic Girls) cleverly assembled and often insightful, if somewhat too leisurely, new novel. Tired of the big city's distracting pace and unnerved by the doubts of midlife, the four couples gather their kids and retreat to the farm where they hope to slow down enough to remember why they are there. Reed's ambitious strategy of telling the story through 11 of the novel's 14 central characters gives the narrative a psychological edge, and the dialogue is crisp and nicely inflected. But some readers may find that the bulk of the novel meanders too slowly through predictable lives. The archetypes are familiar: Chad, a successful writer smugly unimpressed with the world; his wife, Leslie, glamorous, talented, staving off boredom by aping her husband's infidelity; Calvin, a charming, moderately successful but unfulfilled businessman envious of Chad and pretending to write a novel; his wife, Jane, tired of being plain. Then there's Roseann, reclaiming her youth through an affair with a younger man; Stig, Roseann's solicitous cuckold; Polly, a ditzy blond trying to renew herself through pottery; her husband, Zack, an overeager young professor perennially writing a screenplay. The kids are recognizable as well: the attention-starved troublemaker; the shy, effeminate talent; the searching, pubescent girl. Two characters manage to crack the shell of their stereotypes: the respective plights of Chad and his son, Lucky, entwine poignantly in the calamitous denouement, drawing the novel to an affecting close.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

Reedian thoughts about life, marriage, middle age, and children when three couples, their kids, and a close friend spend the summer lumped together in a New England farmhouse. As Kit Craig, Reed wrote the richly stylized psychothriller Gone (1992). This is both Reed's most ambitious novel and her slowest, plowing along like, say, To the Lighthouse--though without Virginia Woolf's prose. What the couples, and the reader, don't know at first is that fine-minded, houseproud Leslie, nonworking wife of the very successful writer Chad, has suckered the whole aging crew into this summer ``idyllness'' so that she can carry on her affair with one of the husbands, which she's doing in response to Chad's infidelity. All's sportive to start, but summer's lease hath all too brief a term to spend, and by midsummer great cracks appear that lead to despair and tragedy. Reed's storytelling attracts once one gets used to it: Each chapter is in a different character's voice, including group voices as well (``the kids'' and so on). Among the players are very rich adman Calvin, immensely jealous of Chad's literary success, and his squashy, plump wife Jane, mother of Rocky and the monstrously hyper little Alfred. Then there's Chad and Leslie's oversensitive boy Timothy, called Lucky, who feels terribly weird entering adolescence. Others are pottery-making Polly and horror-movie writer Zack, as well as Stig, whose wife Roseann has fled, leaving him with their pubescent daughter Speedy. There are a few more nuts and raisins, but the suspense hangs on the question of who's sleeping with whom and what everyone is thinking about aging, parenthood, mortality, etc. These thoughts pile up like padding toward the end, just when you want the climax to take off without the author getting in the way. Terrific takes on time's rush, with a touch of that personal enlightenment offered to a certain generation of moviegoers by The Big Chill--but less glib. -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Product Details


More About the Author

Kit Reed's new short story collection, "What Wolves Know," just out from PS Publishing ( Spring 2011), includes stories originally published in venues ranging from Asimov's SF to the Kenyon Review and the Yale Review.

Called "a gripping dystopian thriller" in a starred review in Publishers Weekly, Kit Reed's novels, Enclave, The Baby Merchant and Thinner Than Thou a winner of the A.L.A. Alex Award, and her collection, Dogs of Truth, are available in trade paperback. The New York Times Book Review has this to say about her work: "Most of these stories shine with the incisive edginess of brilliant cartoons... they are less fantastic than visionary." Other novels include @​expectations, Captain Grownup, Fort Privilege, Catholic Girls, J. Eden and Little Sisters of the Apocalypse. As Kit Craig she is the author of Gone, Twice Burned and other psychological thrillers published here and in the UK. A Guggenheim fellow, she is the first American recipient of an international literary grant from the Abraham Woursell Foundation. She's had stories in, among others, The Yale Review, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, Omni and The Norton Anthology of Contemporary Literature. Her books Weird Women, Wired Women and Little Sisters of the Apocalypse were finalists for the Tiptree Prize.

A member of the board of the Authors League Fund, she serves as Resident Writer at Wesleyan University.

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