From Publishers Weekly
Janowitz's witty and hyberbolic tale about seamy, disaffected New Yorkers poses serio-comic questions about gender and identity but is flawed by a misdirected plot.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal
The protagonist in the latest novel by the author of Slaves of New York (LJ 6/15/86) is a young woman named Pamela Trowel, who finds herself swept into a truly bizarre melodrama involving a fine cast of gritty New York characters. Pamela leads a single-woman-in-New York life of drudgery; she's got a lousy job, an out-of-control social life, and a love/hate relationship with her mother, who is always intruding by way of long phone calls. Then Pamela is followed home by a street urchin (who seems to be eight or nine) whom she finally allows to sleep on her couch, but only if he leaves in the morning. He doesn't leave and has soon become an important part of her life. When things at work really go wrong (a horrific comedy of errors involving bosses, boyfriends, and shrinks), Pamela and the boy flee the city, launching a new series of outrageously unlikely but hilarious events. There's a bleakness below the surface cacophony that makes laughing at the story a bit painful, yet the writing is sharp, edgy, and ultimately a joy to read. Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 4/15/92.
-Jessica Grim, Oberlin Coll. Lib., OhioCopyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
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