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  • Published: 12 July 2016
  • ISBN: 9780735206014
  • Imprint: RH US Audio Adult
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $23.00

Brightness Falls



From the author Bright Lights, Big City, a brilliantly crafted story that unveils the fault lines within a marriage and the profound consequences of ambition.

"A wicked pleasure to read"—Boston Globe

As he maps the fault lines spreading through the once-impenetrable marriage of Russell and Corrine Calloway and chronicles Russell's wildly ambitious scheme to seize control of the publishing house at which he works, Jay McInerney creates an elegy for New York in the 1980s. From the literary chimeras and corporate raiders to those dispossessed by the pandemonium of money and power, Brightness Falls captures a rash era at its moment of reckoning and gives reality back to a time that now seems decidedly unreal.

Combining the lyrical observation of F. Scott Fitzgerald with the laser-bright social satire of Evelyn Waugh, Jay McInerney gives us a novel that is stunningly accomplished and profoundly affecting.

  • Published: 12 July 2016
  • ISBN: 9780735206014
  • Imprint: RH US Audio Adult
  • Format: Audio Download
  • RRP: $23.00

About the author

Jay McInerney

Jay McInerney is the author of eight novels, two collections of short stories, and three collections of essays on wine. His latest book, Bright, Precious Days, was published in 2016. He lives in New York City and Bridgehampton, New York. 

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Praise for Brightness Falls

Praise for Jay McInerney:

  • Disturbingly realistic, engaging. . .Jay McInerney has managed to capture something essential and revealing about this generation. --San Francisco Chronicle

  • Entertaining . . . an ambitious satire . . . Brightness Falls hits all its targets with great accuracy. . . .McInerney's delight in telling a story is contagious. --New York Times Book Review

  • Brilliantly delineated . . . McInerney's writing is ironic, penetrating and at times even lyrical. [He] has all the true instincts of a major novelist. --Wall Street Journal

  • A funny, self mocking, sometimes brilliant portrait of Manhattan's young literary and Wall Street crowd. Our latest lost generation. . . [it's] McInerney's version of Thackeray's Vanity Fair. --Time