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Ever since Amanda could remember, she wanted to be a magician like
her uncle Bill. When he came to New York to attend the magic
convention, she went with him to the Commodore Hotel and watched
while professional magicians from all over the world performed
their newest and most exciting tricks. The most thrilling moment of
all came when Perry the Magnificent asked Amanda to help him
perform a trick on stage, and she took her first step toward her
future career.
Turner Publishing is proud to present another heartfelt memoir from
the early life of the novelist, poet, and activist, Sandra Hochman.
Following Hochman's Loving Robert Lowell that revealed the details
of her affair with one of America's greatest poets, Remembering
Paris 1958-1960, A Memoir chronicles Sandra's years before meeting
Lowell, her first teenaged love and subsequent tumultuous marriage
to an internationally famous concert violinist at the age of 21,
her life as an American expatriate, and finding her creative voice
in the City of Lights.
Turner Publishing is proud to present a new edition of Sandra
Hochman's, Jogging First published by Putnam in 1979, Hochman's
fourth novel is the story of a man always one step ahead of love.
From the Ballantine Books mass-market edition: Jerry Hess is a
smooth millionaire in the priceless world of art. His life is fast
and classy dinners on Monday, screenings on Wednesday, drinks on
Friday. And sex—well, his wife Lillian, a brilliant lawyer,
promises someday. So Jerry runs away. Step by step he crosses the
landscape of his sexual fantasies. From the firm, youthful desires
of Mary to the sophisticated, sinful wishes of Ursule to the
liberating pleasures of Paris, the city where dreams come true,
Jerry must choose between a new future with a new woman or the life
he left behind.
Turner Publishing is proud to present a new edition of Sandra
Hochman's, Happiness Is Too Much Trouble First published by Putnam
in 1976, Hochman's follow-up to Walking Papers is the story of a
unique woman told by a unique voice in American literature. From
the Putman edition: Who took over where Louis B. Mayer left off? A
new kind of woman: Lulu. Lulu Cartwright is a troublemaker on a
pilgrimage to save souls. One morning she wakes up and finds that
she has been named head of the world’s largest film studio. This
powerful job is hers by a freak of computerized technology and
ironic justice. As Lulu describes herself, she is the “unbroken
token.” She is also wise, frightened, funny, and sexually
vulnerable. Throughout the novel we follow Lulu from her moment of
triumph back into her thoughts and memories. We meet her old
lovers, husbands; we meet her parents, her childhood friends, her
child; but most important of all, we meet Dumbo—a hustler and a
stud. We watch Dumbo change from an out-of-work extra into Lulus
“wife” and finally into an entrepreneur in the foot business.
Through Lulu s eyes we put together the puzzle of her love for
Dumbo. Dumbo is alive with contradictions, devotions, and a desire
to heal soles. Dumbo, as perceived by Lulu, is the new hero, a
stud-savior. We also enter, with Lulu, through the computerized
portals of the new Hollywood. We encounter the movieland of
executives who never see films, the Hollywood of consultants,
accountants, and frightened corporation men who have to deliver
image and product in order to satisfy stockholders. On the way to
the top, Lulu Cartwright finds herself in bed with Machiavellis,
losers, and vibrators. Lulu is the kind of woman who manages to
change the system, not merely be victimized by it. Happiness Is Too
Much Trouble is the story, past and present, of a woman who is
finally, and against all odds, a winner. Lulu, by an accident of
history, is forced to give up happiness and settle instead for
fame, fortune, power. What makes her different is that she loves
every minute of it. And so will you.
Turner Publishing is proud to present a new edition of Sandra
Hochman's, Endangered Species First published by Putnam in 1977,
Hochman's third novel is the story of Kathy Kahn's tireless search
for love and purpose through business ventures, poetry, activism,
and doomed love affairs. Hochman's experimental and frenetic novel
mirrors the soul's search for comedy in tragedy and meaning in the
meaningless.
Turner Publishing is proud to present a new edition of Sandra
Hochman's, Playing Tahoe First published by Wyndham Books in 1981,
Hochman's fifth novel is an unsparing and no-holds-barred look at
the music business through the eyes of a woman who bets it all.
From the Wyndham edition: At age forty she was Americas greatest
pop lyricist. From rock and roll through new wave, Sylvia Lundholm
and her composer-partner Nick Dimani made millions while creating
the platinum records in which millions found the sound of their own
longing and joy. Set against the background of the rock and roll
music business in New York City and the casinos and hotels and ski
lifts of Lake Tahoe, Playing Tahoe captures that specific moment in
Sylvia Lundholm's life when she recognized that love was the one
song she could not write, and that only by breaking with the
superhype celebrity of her career might she learn in the hands of
her new lover. Revson Cranwell was the male courtesan every woman
wanted. He was cold, well-bred, indifferent. But he made her hot.
She had everything else that money could buy. Now she wanted him.
He was her song, her lover, her best friend. She would kill for
him. But he would make that unnecessary. In Tahoe, at Harrah’s,
where Dimani is performing, Sylvia and Dimani meet to create a last
great album that will cover the world with his music. But as the
tendrils of Dimani's music threaten to clutch Sylvia back into the
world she is so desperate to leave, the clash between her passion
for Revson and Dimani's desperation for Sylvia’s poetry erupts
into cold-blooded violence. Playing Tahoe will give you insight
into the world of rock and roll and big casinos. But above all it
will teach you the games of a woman who, gambling for love,
desperately wants to hold on to the richness of her own life.
Sandra Hochman has created a novel that explores the guts of a
woman in the midst of a change, who will overturn the American
Dream to follow a stranger, Revson, who is a new antihero of modern
fiction.
Turner Publishing is proud to present a new edition of Sandra
Hochman's treatise on poetry and songwriting, Streams. First
published by Prentice-Hall in 1978, Hochman's approach to teaching
is just as unconventional and revelatory today as it was forty
years ago. From the Introduction by Hochman: This is a personal
book that I hope will be like a friend. In a simple way I want to
tell you some thoughts that I have about writing poetry and songs,
and share with you some warm-up exercises for writing that can be
used to limber up the mind the same way that dancers limber before
a performance. Writing has always been for me a necessary
experience— something that I feel compelled to do. If that
feeling of wanting to write is inside of you—what I call the
Necessary Angel wanting to speak—that writing can be a part of
your life experience the way it is part of mine.
For fifteen years Anne Hathaway kept a diary. It was no ordinary
diary, as Anne, an excellent writer of poems and songs in her own
right, was also the wife of the world's most famous poet and
playwright, William Shakespeare. In its pages she reveals the man
she knew and loved and their shared life full of triumph and
tragedy. Pulitzer-prize nominated poet Sandra Hochman's imagining
of Mrs. Shakespeare is both a thoughtful take on one of the
greatest mysteries in Western literature and the story of two
people who would change the English language forever.
Turner Publishing proudly presents the first of three new literary
works by Sandra Hochman, author of Walking Papers. When asked in
1976 by a reporter from People Magazine if her first two novels
were autobiographical, Sandra Hochman replied, "My real life is
much more fabulous than the books. One day I plan to write about
it—men, Paris and women's liberation. It will probably be called
Unreal Life." Hochman first met Pulitzer Prize-winning American
poet Robert Lowell in 1961 at the Russian Tea Room in New York. She
was to interview him for Encounter magazine. Hochman was
twenty-five and had recently returned from Paris where she had
lived with her husband for four years. They were now separated.
Lowell was forty-three with plans to leave his wife. Hochman
remembers it as the day that changed her life. The two poets fell
in love instantly, and before the night was over, they had vowed to
stay together forever. In Hochman's first literary work in almost
forty years, she writes in startling detail about the torrid and
ultimately doomed affair that would follow.
A spiritual successor to Ernest Hemingway's A Moveable Feast Turner
Publishing is proud to present another heartfelt memoir from the
early life of the novelist, poet, and activist, Sandra Hochman.
Following Hochman's Loving Robert Lowell that revealed the details
of her affair with one of America's greatest poets, Remembering
Paris 1958-1960, A Memoir chronicles Sandra's years before meeting
Lowell, her first teenaged love and subsequent tumultuous marriage
to an internationally famous concert violinist at the age of 21,
her life as an American expatriate, and finding her creative voice
in the City of Lights in the middle of the 20th century.
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