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Paperback A Woman Run Mad Book

ISBN: 0802137318

ISBN13: 9780802137319

A Woman Run Mad

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Format: Paperback

Condition: Like New

$6.89
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Book Overview

John L'Heureux is a consummate stylist and entertainer, and in A Woman Run Mad he delivers a novel that is part comedy of manners and part psychosexual thriller. Blocked writer, accidental scholar, inattentive husband, all J. J. Quinn wants is peace, and he has gone to buy his wife an expensive handbag to accomplish it. As the bag in question walks out the door under the arm of a beautiful, aristocratic shoplifter, though, Quinn's curiosity leads him deep into mystery and danger. The shoplifter is Sarah Slade, a Boston Brahmin attempting to ditch a past as bloody as Medea's. Compared to Quinn's hypercompetent, Euripides-scholar wife, Claire, the unhinged Sarah is an alluring breath of fresh air -- but, of course, Quinn has no idea of the Pandora's box he's opened. Acclaimed by Newsweek as "witty and literate . . . Grand Guignol for grown-ups," A Woman Run Mad is an unsettling, deeply satisfying novel. "Remind s] one of Iris Murdoch, or Muriel Spark, or E. M. Forster. Yet A Woman Run Mad is unlike any novel I know . . . unusual intelligence and personality are alive throughout the book." -- Richard P. Brickner, The New York Times Book Review; "Unless you have no interest in passions, the edge of madness, forbidden obsessions, runaway libidos and dangerous desires, A Woman Run Mad will fascinate you, from its title to its perfect final sentence. . . . A thinking man's Fatal Attraction." -- Chicago Sun-Times; "Normality -- as our time understands the word -- and monstrosity are L'Heureux's poles, and he joins them with extraordinary dexterity. . . . The ending is not to be revealed." -- Los Angeles Times Book Review; "A superior suspense story . . . It is the kind of story that might well have appealed to a writer like Patricia Highsmith, a drama of interlocking obsessions." -- The New York Times.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

Thought-provoking psychological thriller!

I am duly impressed with this novel. John L'Heureux has crafted a rather disturbing and compelling psychological thriller. In fact, it is one of the best thrillers I have read in quite a long time.In an attempt to achieve peace in an otherwise turbulent marriage, J.J. Quinn sets out to find the perfect gift for his wife. However, in his quest to find said gift, he stumbles upon a beautiful and mysterious shoplifter. Intrigued, Quinn integrates himself into the shoplifter's life -- though he has no knowledge of the enigmatic woman's sinister past. A blocked novelist, Quinn believes he's finally found his inspiration through the ecstatic passion that Sarah Slade bestows upon him, but he gets more than he's bargained for...The building of tension and suspense reaches a flooring climax.The padding out of the story is intriguing and clever and the dialogue is sharp and full of wit. The characters are well developed, especially Angelo (Sarah's brother-in-law) and Claire (Quinn's wife). L'Heureux has written an intelligent and haunting tale of eroticism and obsession. A Woman Run Mad should be read from cover to read. Thus, I recommend it most highly.

A compelling read

This is not a book I would normally pick to read ~~ till a friend recommended this book to me. I have never heard of John L'Heureux before, so this is a new venture for me to read. After I turned the last page, the conclusion I reached may not be exactly what the author intended, but it did provoke a reaction from me.I would have rated this book 5 based on its superb writing prose and how he snares your attention while reading this book ... but the use of graphic details of the murder and sex scenes are just a little too much for me to take. I don't see how it adds to this book at all ~~ it only takes away the enjoyment I had while reading the suspense he was building up ... and it is a let down. It's as if he decided that his story wasn't enough to keep my interest, so he tries to "jazz" it up to keep my attention. It didn't work.Otherwise, the story within a story did keep my attention and made me think ~~ which I love it when an author grabs me by my eyes and keep me ensnared in seeing their point of views.Quinn, an inattentive husband to Claire, sets off a chain of events when he followed Sarah home from the store after she steals a handbag that he was thinking of buying for Claire. In turn, Quinn gets propositioned by Angelo, who is Sarah's bodyguard and her brother's lover. It is a soap opera of a sort ~~ ones that the gods of old surely love to tell. Based on Claire's, a professor of Euripides-studies, conversations with Angelo, you can tell that L'Heureux is attempting to tell the bloody story of Medea through Sarah and Claire. Quinn's decisions lead to the chaos that erupted violently on everyone's part. This book is great for discussions. It is a book I would recommend a book group to read together because there are so many interpretations of this book and its ending. This is also a book that makes you want to brush up on your Greek tragedies and see what the gods had to say. It is a good read ~~ in spite of the gory details that I wish had been downplayed ~~ and something I wouldn't mind discussing with someone about.

Good Reading

In all, this is a compelling read. The plot is tight, the characters are interesting, and the prose sizzles. There are some interesting metafictional aspects to the story as well. Two of the principal characters are writers, one of novels and one of academic studies of women in Euripides' plays; L'Heureux exploits this cleverly but not too overtly. True there is gore. True one of the characters has had some nasty sexual experiences at the hands of a former lover. These are not gratuitously included for shock value, however. They enhance the story. It is good that L'Heureux did not shy away from describing these things; they amplify the psychological dimesions of the story, adding depth to the characters. That said, I'm sure many readers will find certain passages revolting. But, then, good fiction isn't only about puppy dogs and fields full of wildflowers.On the whole this is one of the better contemporary novels I've read recently.

As close to classical tragedy as American fiction comes.

This was L'Heureux's debut novel, but don't let that put you off; he was already an accomplished short story writer and poet. Oftentimes, short story writers and poets can't make the transition to the novel form, but that's not the case here. L'Heureux gives us the story of a husband, a wife, an insane murderess, and her homosexual bodyguard, and more than anything, underneath the gore and glitz, L'Heureux's real intention is to examine the relationships between these people.There are few authors, in these days when the gods no longer have truck with humanity, that attempt to write tragedy in the classical Greek fashion. L'Heureux takes an inventive out by using insanity as the "god" whose mechanizations drive the narrative, and in doing so bring it closer to classical tragedy than to its modern cousin, metatheatre. It's a risky move, but one carried off extremely well by one of the American masters of letters.
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