Winner of Pushcart's Seventeenth Annual Editors' Book Award, this first novel about a marriage in crisis has evoked extraordinary praise from readers Pam Houston and Rick Bass. In presenting Lucky... This description may be from another edition of this product.
You won't be disappointed with this book! It's filled with the complexity of real life, as portrayed by three-dimensional characters trying to make sense of what this crazy world offers them. I found the writing style fast-paced and jazzy, without a trace of self-indulgence or intrusiveness. The emotional complexity is maintained throughout: there's no clear-cut "good guys" or "bad guys" and that's as it should be in a work of art. This is one I'm passing around to friends and looking forward to re-reading.
amazing novel
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 22 years ago
What an excellent portrayal of the trials of marriage. The main character is incredibly life-like and compelling, and the writing is absolutely breathtaking. I read it all through in one night.
Do yourself a favor and read this book!
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 25 years ago
If there was any justice in the book publishing world, "Lucky Man, Lucky Woman" would be Oprah's next Book Club pick. This is a dead-on funny and honest portrait of marriage--its joy, tedium, and occasional madness. Perry Lafond is a great character. He's smart and reflective and kind, but also stubborn, confused, and mistaken--the way most human beings really are. This book is pure pleasure from the first sentence to the last.
I may be biased, but I love this book
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
I was honored to have Jack Driscoll as my teacher in high school for two years, so when his first novel was published, I looked forward to reading it with excitement and some trepidation, wondering if it would measure up to my expectations. I am happy to say that it did, and in fact exceeded them. In "Lucky Man, Lucky Woman", Driscoll tells a compelling story of a man, Perry, as he deals with adultery, family, and infertility. Actually, the book is about much more than that, but to say more would not do it justice. As the story progresses, you feel pulled by Perry himself to keep reading, to constantly wonder what will happen next. "Lucky Man, Lucky Woman" is, in that sense, like Life itself. In some ways, I wish the book had been twice as long: I really felt that Perry was living and breathing, and that his life extended past the last page. Actually, this novel reminds me a lot of Ray Carver's short stories, especially those from his collections "What We Talk About When We Talk About Love" and "Cathedral". Both authors are genuine in their portrayals of the human existence, so much so that their stories make you feel as though you were their characters, that your life was being played out by their words. Jack Driscoll, in his first novel, has truly achieved something great, and for that I will forever admire and envy him.
A powerful, touching look at a marriage
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Jack Driscoll's writing has always been beautiful - the stories in his "Wanting Only to be Heard" are incredible - but with "Lucky Man, Lucky Woman," he takes it to the next level. I attended his reading last night in Madison, Wis., and though I'm well acquainted with his work and had already read the book, I was still left nearly speechless. Don't pass this one by.
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