Other Men's Daughters
By Richard Stern
Introduction by Philip Roth
Afterword by Wendy Doniger
By Richard Stern
Introduction by Philip Roth
Afterword by Wendy Doniger
Category: Literary Fiction
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$15.95
Aug 29, 2017 | ISBN 9781681371511
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Praise
“As if Chekhov had written Lolita. . . . I would contend that in its own felicitous small-scale way, Other Men’s Daughters is to . . . the sixties what The Great Gatsby was to the twenties, The Grapes of Wrath to the thirties, and Rabbit Is Rich to the seventies: a microscope exactly focused on a definitive specimen of what was once the present American moment.” —Philip Roth, from the Introduction
“A novel so good it would have been one of the most valid contenders for the Great American Novel of the decade. It may have achieved in a sane, civilized, academic and romantic way what its showier contemporaries miss by a mile.”
—Ann Rosenberg, The Philadelphia Inquirer
“It is a pleasure to find a novel written with such intelligence and feeling, a novel that judges none of its people but holds them up to calm and affectionate scrutiny. Other Men’s Daughters . . . is ‘relevant’—but its real subject is in the disruptions and exaltation of the human heart.”
—Jonathan Yardley, The Washington Post Book World
“Richard Stern’s style is the mark of an exceptional and delicate attention. Other Men’s Daughters is…an impressive pleas for the private life as a continuing subject for serious fiction…there is urgency and power in Stern’s treatment of his profound theme: the necessary end of particular seasons in our lives, the pain and confusion and exhilaration of leaving safe old places when they have become truly uninhabitable.” —Michael Wood, The New York Review of Books
“This is the best novel about divorce and the anguish of a lost family that I have ever read.” —Wendy Doniger, Mircea Eliade Distinguished Service Professor of History of Religions, at the University of Chicago
“A flower-fresh, moon-bright novel…the author being one of those who can convey all of Eros in a snip of dialogue, a few sentences.” —Cosmopolitan
“No novelist could improve upon Richard Stern’s inventory of what Merriwether has to lose…an attractive book and occasionally and extraordinarily touching one.” —Time
“I think Other Men’s Daughters is an important book, one of the few that will be read later. It is brilliantly written, a true novel of manners, sharply observant of surfaces, and, finally, profound.” —Herbert Wilner
“Stern’s accomplishment (here, as in all his work) is to locate precisely the comedy and the pains of a particularly contemporary phenomenon without exaggeration, animus, or operatic ideology…. In all, it is as if Chekhov had written Lolita…. I would hold that in its own felicitous way, Other Men’s Daughters is to the sixties what The Great Gatsby was to the twenties, The Grapes of Wrath to the thirties, and Rabbit Is Rich to the eighties: a microscope exactly focused upon a thinly sliced specimen of what was once the present moment.” —Philip Roth
“The novel’s world rings true…we respond to the honesty of Stern’s vision.” —Chicago Daily News
“For years I have admired the elegant fiction of Richard Stern for its impeccable language, its gracious erudition, and, above all, it’s brilliant wit. In Other Men’s Daughters, to me his most moving novel, these qualities serve the cause of mercy.” —Thomas Berger
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