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  • Published: 15 July 2015
  • ISBN: 9781590178447
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $32.99

Talk




Linda Rosenkrantz's laugh-out-loud, lascivious, gossip-soaked hybrid of novel and autobiographical screed is the Girls of the 1960s. Irresistable, irreverent, and intellectualy sharp, Talk is a beach read like no other.

Talk is a hilariously irreverent and racy testament to dialogue: the gossip, questioning, analysis, arguments, and revelations that make up our closest friendships. It’s the summer of 1965 and Emily, Vincent, and Marsha are at the beach. All three are ambitious and artistic; all are hovering around thirty; and all are deeply and mercilessly invested in analyzing themselves and everyone around them. The friends discuss sex, shrinks, psychedelics, sculpture, and S and M in an ongoing dialogue where anything goes and no topic is off limits. Talk is the result of these conversations, recorded by Linda Rosenkrantz and transformed into a novel whose form and content put it well ahead of its time. Controversial upon its first publication in 1968, Talk remains fresh, lascivious, and laugh-out-loud funny nearly fifty years later.

  • Published: 15 July 2015
  • ISBN: 9781590178447
  • Imprint: NY Review Books
  • Format: Paperback
  • Pages: 240
  • RRP: $32.99

Praise for Talk

"Cool, astringent...something new, something beyond black humor or pop fiction." --The New Republic

"Utterly hip, utterly frank, utterly amoral." --New Haven Register

"The rawest of raw material is hashed over in detail, but with such clinical openness and enthusiasm that one is far more often delighted and stimulated than embarrassed or shocked." --James Leo Herlihy, author of Midnight Cowboy, Book World

"The three [main characters] mercilessly dissect themselves and each other. Ostensibly everything goes in, with sudden realistic swerves of attention from the state of their souls and their sex-lives to the cooking--from egos to eggs, so to speak, which is very much the way life is...The pattern of self-revelation is far from coarse: it is eloquent and convincing, with its insights suddenly stumbled upon, its slender bridges of nervous sympathy that join each private island to the threatening outside world." --Norman Shrapnel, The Guardian

"The characters are defined by speech alone, and the talk is of a kind that has been missing from literature...Miss Rosenkrantz's importance as a writer is to have shown, right away in her first book, that exact data can go into a novel without the pressures of conventional plot and character requirements." --Vogue

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