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Peyton Amberg: A Novel [Hardcover]

Tama Janowitz (Author)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)


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Book Description

October 22, 2003
In her sizzling new novel, Tama Janowitz moves beyond the world of the single woman (Slaves of New York, A Certain Age), and now targets a young woman growing ever restless in her marriage, and ever hopeful that the next bed will produce someone more exciting. As she moves from man to man, Peyton Amberg slowly but surely loses her youthfulness, her good looks, even her sanity, as her paramours become rougher and the sex more dangerous.

A savvy riff on the classic figure of Madam Bovary, Peyton Amberg is a caustic and brilliant satire of contemporary marriage as it is undermined by free-floating lust and exploits of a woman yearning for fulfillment outside of rigid societal structure.

Peyton Amberg is nasty, funny, jaundiced, sarcastic, searingly honest, and mesmerizing from beginning to end.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Peyton Amberg is a travel agent who really gets around-in more ways than one. In her latest no-holds-barred take on urban malaise, Janowitz (Slaves of New York, etc.) chronicles the international romps of a modern-day Madame Bovary. With her stunning looks ("usually it would be impossible to find a man who, physically, was her equal"), Peyton has no trouble luring men to bed, but under pressure from her manic-depressive mother, she hastily marries an unsuspecting dentist for money and out of fear that no one else will deem her marriageable. Struck with a bout of ennui after her wedding and tired of trying to live up to the expectations of her in-laws, she rushes back to work and almost immediately takes a cheap trip to Brazil, where she meets a debonair German-Italian man, Germano. In the first of many misadventures, Peyton holes up with Germano in her hotel room, where she is wined and dined and otherwise entertained. With her libido unleashed, she finds it next to impossible to return to a normal life in her apartment on Manhattan's Upper West Side, and she pulls further away from her husband and, eventually, her young son. Though she perceives herself as self-sufficient, she becomes more and more addicted to her extramarital hanky panky ("A monkey in the zoo... could not have gone on a wilder bender on a weekend pass from its cage"), finding satisfaction in the beds of gangster Xian Rong in Hong Kong and cowboy Sandy in Vegas. Peyton's overactive id and sense of dissatisfaction seem a bit contrived at times, and her comeuppance rather old-fashioned, but Janowitz's trademark mix of humor and gross-out realism give the novel a queasy charge. Author tour.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Billed as a modern-day Madame Bovary, Janowitz's tenth book traces the rise and eventual ruin of a woman who believes her only resource is her beauty. Bored with her job and desperate to move out of her family's filthy apartment, Peyton marries the first man who asks. She's soon disenchanted with marriage and drifts into a series of infidelities. When her beauty begins to fade, her increasingly desperate need for male attention drives her into situations at first merely humiliating but ultimately degrading and dangerous. Janowitz's eye for the sordid detail is as merciless as ever, and she's in her element describing Peyton's squalid childhood home, her drug-addled and delusional mother, her increasingly dreary succession of affairs, and her nebbishy husband. Ultimately, though, the ferocity of her writing underscores the novel's major flaw: Peyton is so ineffectual and passive, and the supporting characters so uniformly unappealing, that there is little to care about in the story of her downfall. Janowitz built a following with Slaves of New York (1986), one of the defining books of the 1980s, and she also won acclaim for her recent novel A Certain Age (1999). Readers will be interested in her latest. Meredith Parets
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 336 pages
  • Publisher: St. Martin's Press; First Edition edition (October 22, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312318448
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312318444
  • Product Dimensions: 9.8 x 6.4 x 1.1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.3 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (8 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,163,425 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

8 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.2 out of 5 stars (8 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

5 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Janowitz At Her Best, November 17, 2003
By 
Kaylie Jones "kjones5" (New York, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Peyton Amberg: A Novel (Hardcover)
I think Tama Janowitz is one of the most important female writers of our generation and I become offended at the moral idiocy of certain reviewers, who seem incapable of grasping the finer nuances and humor of Janowitz's style. Just as "A Certain Age" describes a modern-day Lilly Bart to perfection, "Peyton Amberg" does the same for Emma Bovary. Janowitz experienced enormous success with both press and readership at a young age, which seems to incite people to attack her later work. Ridiculous. Her work keeps improving.
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11 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars This powerful book is the Madame Bovary of our time, October 17, 2003
By 
Bookreporter (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Peyton Amberg: A Novel (Hardcover)
Tama Janowitz burst onto the literary scene in the 1980s with the publication of her bestselling story collection SLAVES OF NEW YORK, which deftly chronicled the insecurities and eccentricities of a colorful menagerie of city dwelling singles. Her subsequent books have been similar send-ups of Manhattan life, but with PEYTON AMBERG, Janowitz charts a new course as she turns her acerbic eye on married life and its malcontents.

PEYTON AMBERG is the MADAME BOVARY of our time: a modern-day domestic drama of longing, regret, resentment, and dreams unfulfilled. Similar to the infamously restless Emma Bovary, the title character in this novel is a deeply unhappy woman who revolts against the confines of her married life and its middle-class trappings through a series of adulterous affairs. It is only through these illicit liaisons that she is able to feel alive, whole and in control of her destiny. Peyton is in perpetual pursuit of an elusive and fleeting happiness, convinced that each sexual encounter is going to be the key to her salvation --- the thing that will fill the void.

Born on the wrong side of the tracks into a dysfunctional family, she had learned early on that her beauty was her only ticket out of a life of poverty. Desperate to escape this dreary blue-collar destiny, Peyton married young to an ambitious but boorish dental student. While at first she couldn't believe her good fortune in securing a loving husband and comfortable middle class future, she quickly grows restless and disillusioned by the marriage that she thought would be her deliverance. Her new life as a middle-class housewife suddenly feels provincial, her new husband tiresome, and she is overcome with resentment and regret that she could have done better.

She returns to her job as a travel agent, which provides some respite from reality by giving her the opportunity to travel on junkets to exotic locales. Her corruption begins innocently enough on a solo trip to Brazil when her wallet is stolen and she is befriended and seduced by a rich and handsome older man. After returning home, the staidness of her life and marriage pales in comparison to the excitement of the affair, and thus, like a junkie craving the next high, Peyton embarks on a series of sordid liaisons in an effort to stave off her gnawing discontent.

While these dalliances allow her to briefly escape herself, each encounter leaves her emptier and more unfulfilled than before. A downward spiral of shame and degradation ensues until, in the end, she is left with nothing. Her youth and beauty have evaporated and she is rendered completely pathetic and devoid of humanity. Alone in a seamy Belgium hotel room, she realizes too late that what she had might not have been so bad after all.

While Peyton's dissatisfaction with her station in life and her desire for better is perhaps a universal human condition, we are unable to feel sympathy because of her remorseless and self-indulgent actions. Her unwillingness to accept and appreciate the realities of her life ensures that her moral corruption is inevitable. The theme of destiny vs. free will is continually played out in this novel. While Peyton makes choices that lead to her downfall, she is also a victim of circumstances. The constraints of her upbringing, including lack of money and education, gave her limited options from the beginning.

But whatever disadvantages she may have had, there is little to make one pity the numb, one-dimensionally drawn character of Peyton Amberg. Her vast disappointment with life and her feelings of futility and powerlessness are echoed by the novel's airless and nihilistic atmosphere wherein time seems to stand still. This effect is created in part by the unusual and disjointed narrative technique that tells the story from the future moving backwards, interspersing slices of Peyton's married life with vignettes of her liaisons. The story ends where it began, some twenty years into the future. While this is a powerful morality tale and work of social commentary with strong echoes of MADAME BOVARY, its relentlessly downbeat nihilism and lack of a redemptive outcome may ultimately turn off readers.

--- Reviewed by Joni Rendon

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5.0 out of 5 stars Great book - Hope she writes a sequel!, January 11, 2012
By 
Stephanie (United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
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This review is from: Peyton Amberg: A Novel (Paperback)
Hi - I bought this book some time ago and think I will have to get it again because it was so good. What a jarring story! I am not much of a fiction reader, but Tama Janowitz did such a great job that it sure felt like a true story to me. This would make a great movie and although I was compelled to read Tama's other books, this one is definitely the best.
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First Sentence:
There were a few hotels near the Central Station, but the first one she went to was over three hundred dollars a night, and she was aware she could no longer afford it. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
sexy princess
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Xian Rong, New York, Hong Kong, Man Rong, Long Island, Las Vegas, Tama Janowitz, Nails of Nobleness, Accursed Planet, Cassius Amberg, Central Station, South Beach, United States
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