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Billy and Francis couldn't be more different, at least when it
comes to age and disposition, but that doesn't prevent them from
falling in love and settling into the easy rhythms of romance -
phone calls every morning, rendezvous every weekday afternoon, the
odd out-of-town escape - despite both still being very partial to
their spouses. In interconnected stories, Laurie Colwin deftly
reveals each character's point of view and examines, in razor-sharp
detail, the 'marvellous' and messy glory of modern love and the
curious desires of the heart. This whirlwind romance, perfectly
captured in Colwinesque frank and funny style, is firm proof that
opposites really do attract.
To the rest of the world, Polly Solo-Miller Demarest lives a
charmed life. She has a beautiful home, a dashing lawyer husband,
and two delightful children. But beneath this idyllic surface, the
pressure of being the 'perfect flower' of an illustrious family -
and a stable, always-available wife, mother, and daughter - are
getting to her. The spark has gone out of her marriage, and to her
own surprise, she's having an affair. What follows is at once
cathartic and provoking, and both may be necessary states in order
for Polly to become the kind of person she wants to be.
When Sam Bax, that charming daredevil of a Boston lawyer, sails his
boat into a storm off the coast of Maine, Elizabeth "Olly" Bax, his
wife and ardent sidekick, becomes a widow at the edge of
seventy-seven. With no pretense of "courage," Olly grieves,
coping with the warmth and awkwardness of family ties and trying to
rethink her own life. Realizing that her risks are as daring
as any of Sam's -- while he chanced life and limb, Olly risks her
heart -- she finds that love can take some surprising turns.
Laurie Colwin depics Olly's recovery with humor, compassion, and
a decided lack of sentimentally, creating a real heroine who
remains true to her heart and still manages to keep her head.
Within these fourteen hilarious and insightful tales of urban
life, you'll meet: Raiford Phelps, an ornithologist who discovers
new patterns of animal behavior when he meets Mary Leibnitz.Benno
Morna, a temporary bachelor, free to indulge in TV, junk food, and
Greenie Frenzel when his wholesome wife is out of town.Vincent
Cadworthy and Guido Morris, whose elegant friendship is suddenly
disrupted by Misty Berkowitz. Elizabeth Bayard, whose passion for
order and civility does constant battle with her unruly loves.They
are buffeted by the pressures of their jobs, imposed upon by their
families and their surroundings, and remain ever hopeful of making
sense of their lives. With compassion and biting wit, Laurie Colwin
has created a new sort of comedy of manners.
'Everything food writing should be: funny, profound, inspiring and
unaffected' Nigella Lawson Weaving together memories, recipes, and
wild tales of years spent in the kitchen, Home Cooking is Laurie
Colwin's manifesto on the joys of sharing food and entertaining.
From the humble hot-plate of her one-room apartment to the crowded
kitchens of bustling parties, Colwin regales us with tales of meals
gone both magnificently well and disastrously wrong. Never before
published in the UK, this is hilarious, personal and full of
Colwin's hard-won expertise. Home Cooking will speak to the heart
(and stomach) of any amateur cook, professional chef, or food
lover. 'A feast . . . witty, no-nonsense. Home Cooking is a
culinary companion as comfortable beside your bed as your cooker.
It has an essay for everyone who loves to eat and demonstrates that
home is where the heart is - and the stomach happiest' Observer
'Laurie Colwin's food thoughts are like phone calls from a dear
friend' New Yorker 'Shrewd, witty and consistently enjoyable' Mail
on Sunday
Guido and Vincent are childhood best friends--third cousins,
really--living in Cambridge and dreaming about their futures. Guido
plans to write poetry while Vincent feels confident he will win a
Nobel prize for physics. When Guido spots Holly while exiting a
museum, he can immediately sense that she will difficult, quirky,
and hard to live with. He loves her on sight. Vincent, open-minded
and cheerful, meets Misty at work. Though she is a bored and
misanthropic brunette, he finds himself desperate to know her.
Through courtship, jealousy, estrangement, and other perils, "Happy
All the Time "follows four sane, intelligent, and good-intentioned
people who manage to find love in spite of themselves.
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Happy All The Time (Paperback)
Laurie Colwin; Introduction by Katherine Heiny
1
bundle available
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R343
Discovery Miles 3 430
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Ships in 12 - 17 working days
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It was just as she suspected: love turned you into perfect mush.
GUIDO is not in the habit of falling in love with women he sees in museums. Until he meets HOLLY. Precise about everything, she knows what she likes: pressed sheets, oranges (but nothing orange-flavoured), tea on a tray - and now, Guido.
Meanwhile VINCENT, Guido's eternally cheerful best friend and cousin, falls for his misanthropic new colleague, MISTY. She seems as uninterested in love as she is in Vincent (at first).
Through courtship, arguments, wedding plans and other perils, the couples find a way to be happy (almost) all the time.
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