A Life in Men: A Novel | Gina Frangello
Deeply human, darkly funny, seriously sexy. *The friendship between Mary and Nix had endured since childhood, a seemingly unbreakable bond, until the mid-1980s, when the two young women embarked on a summer vacation in Greece. It was a trip initiated by Nix, who had just learned that Mary had been diagnosed with a disease that would cut her life short and who was determined that it be the vacation of a lifetime. But by the time their visit to Greece was over, Nix had withdrawn from their friendship, and Mary had no idea why.Three years later, Nix is dead, and Mary returns to Europe to try to understand what went wrong. In the process she meets the first of many men that she will spend time with as she travels throughout the world. Through them she experiences not only a sexual awakening but a spiritual and emotional awakening that allows her to understand how the past and the future are connected and to appreciate the freedom to live life adventurously. Frangello illuminates the ways in which life itself is an illusion, but a grand and beautiful and heartbreaking and brilliant one. A book about the deepest kind of love, "A Life in Men" asks (and answers) these questions: How would you live if you had limited time? And with whom would you spend it? *Emily Rapp, author of "The Still Point of the Turning World" "A Life in Men" is a joyful, ambitious novel that is also an adventure traversing three continents, as well as a meditation on love, sex, and, most important, friendship, which can overcome time, distance, and even death. Bonnie Jo Campbell, author of "Once Upon a River" "A Life in Men" is a vivid, devastating, and ferocious novel that captures a woman s whole life in a world torn apart by terrorism and alienation . . . A story of love, passion, and friendship that will rock readers to the core. Patrick Somerville, author of "The Cradle" and "This Bright River" Gina Frangello delivers truth in the form of brave, purposeful, masterful prose. The emotional lives of her characters are as complex as those of any breathing human, nuanced, sharp, and fully real. Elizabeth Crane, author of "We Only Know So Much""