Ben, yazma eylemiyle boğuşan bir yazar adayı; Ginnie ise titiz bir dansçıdır. 1951’de birbirlerine aşık olmuş ve her ne olursa olsun birbirlerine tutunmaya karar vermiş iki ürkek çocukturlar. Dünya ikisinin de önünde keşfedilmeyi bekliyordur... Bir yanda 1950’lerin New York’unun büyüleyici cazibesi, diğer yanda Hollywood’un yıldızlarla parlayan neşeli şov dünyası: Ben ve Ginnie neon ışıklar arasında birbirlerine duydukları saf, yoğun ve kusursuz aşkı sürdürmeyi başarmışlardır. Bu aşk sonsuza kadar sürmeli, şimdiye kadar yazılmış tüm kitaplarda ve peri masallarında anlatıldığı gibi romantizm ve tutkuyla harlanmalıdır. Ne var ki, aşkları sahiden de sonsuza kadar sürebilecek midir ya da bu aşk ikisinin de fark edemediği beklenmedik bir kırılma nedeniyle sallantıdan kurtulabilecek midir?
Ebooks now available for download. Print-on-demand to follow soon. See author website for links and updates at www.hermanraucher.com
Herman Raucher began his writing career during The Golden Age of Live Television, penning original one hour dramas for such esteemed shows as Studio One, Goodyear Playhouse and The Alcoa Hour. At about the same time, he was serving as Advertising Copy Director for Walt Disney whose new company, Buena Vista, was venturing from animated films into live action productions. It was also the time of the debut of Disneyland and all the excitement that came with it.
Back in New York he served as Creative Director and Board Member of several major ad agencies. To further fill out his life he turned his pen to writing four plays, six novels and seven films, among them being “Summer of '42” which was both a best-selling novel and a box office success. It earned him an Academy Award Nomination for Best Original Screenplay as well as a similar nomination from The Writers Guild of America. Raucher’s cult film, “Hieronymus Merkin,”won the Best Original Screenplay award from The Writers Guild of Great Britain. His racially charged movie, “Watermelon Man,”shook up the film critics no small end.
He still feels most at home with novels, in that no one can change as much as a comma without his approval—a condition that every writer savors but very few achieve.
This book is beautifully written, and makes good use of the dual-perspective of both main characters. Plus, this amazing story is actually Raucher's biography, tidied up to make it work as a novel! This book is fantastic!!!
I first came across this book in 1981, and it became my all time favorite. Nearly thirty years later it's still in the top spot. I reread it every couple of years - it's a great summer / vacation novel.
When you encounter a book that you adore enough to reread every few years, and then discover a bunch of people who do, I think it's worth recommending! A wonderfully written slice of mid-century NYC wrapped around a terrific love story.
A lot longer and more sexually explicit than Raucher’s classic Summer of 42, but no less heartfelt. The story revolves around Ben, a writer for a movie PR department who gets drafted into the Korean War; and Ginny, the dancer who moves in with his roommate to help make the rent while he’s away. They start corresponding by mail and fall in love. When he comes home, they meet in person at last, and begin a relationship of ecstatic bliss - until the ultimate bizarre love triangle (well, more like lust on one corner) threatens to tear them apart. Beautifully drawn, three-dimensional characters (I like how Ginny is a spitfire with a sarcastic sense of humor and less than pristine language, rather than a paragon of perfection) and a real sense of what New York was like in the ‘50s. Knocking off one star for some unflattering portrayals of LGBT characters - they can only be approached as products of the time when the story takes place (and when the book was written).
I've always been a fan of Herman Raucher. This book alludes to another chapter in his life, but it all seems a bit fanciful. Maybe you have to be in love to truly appreciate it, and I most definitely am not. Ah, but there were some brilliant and well written lines.
Was a great book. Obviously autobiographical, a window into life in late '40s-early '50s New York. Has raunchy bits almost reminiscent of Miller's Tropic of Capricorn! Worth a read? Yes, on several levels!
ben struggles to find his place in new york city, aplace you can get lost and no one cares. ginnie is an underage heiress,who lies about her age, who runs away and also takes on new york city. she is a success almost instantly. how do they meet? why do different people appear in the apartment unannounced? does ben find the same success? can he and ginnie find each other? you'll have to read through the humor, sarcasm, cynical and well written pages.
Wow. I absolutely adored this book. It's a long adventure from start to finish but it's absolute perfection. I love a story told from more than one perspective and this was no exception. It's a love story, sure, but with so much life behind it. It's so vivid. I felt completely immersed in what was happening as if I was a background actor in the reel playing inside my head. The two main characters could not be more different but they make sense together and you can't help but root for them. I have recommended this book to family members and they shared my opinions. This book is spectacular.
A good friend lent me this book and she is right. It is very good, and it really reminds me of the 70s! I think things have changed since then, for all of us!