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Foreign Affairs
Foreign Affairs: A Novel | Alison Lurie
16 posts | 22 read | 29 to read
Winner of the Pulitzer Prize and the National Book Critics Circle Award for Fiction, and a finalist for the National Book Award: Alison Luries supremely entertaining masterwork about two American scholars, both alone in London, who find romance in the most unlikely places Prim, divorced, and middle-aged, Vinnie Miner gave up on love long ago. On her way to London to research a book about childrens folk rhymesa scholarly pursuit that even her fellow academics sneer atshe finds herself sitting next to the man who will change the course of her life. Brash and nave, he is a sanitary engineer from Oklahoma on a package vacation. Also in London is Vinnies colleague, the young, handsome English professor Fred Turner. His marriage and self-esteem are both on the rocks, but he is about to find consolation in the arms of the most beautiful actress in England. Stylish and highborn, she introduces Fred to a glamorous, yet eccentric, London scene that he never expectedor preparedto encounter. This ebook features an illustrated biography of Alison Lurie including rare images from the authors personal collection.
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review
K.Wielechowski
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Panpan

Vinnie and Fred, two American English professors are in England doing research for their books. They both end up having affairs, Fred with an unstable British actress, Vinnie, with an uncouth tourist from Tulsa, OK, USA. Both affairs end badly.
Not a whole lot actually happens, just a lot of talking about things happening. Not for me.

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K.Wielechowski
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That old nursery rhyme took a dark turn 😳

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K.Wielechowski
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You know how male authors sometimes describe how female characters think of their appearance and it‘s always sexualized and ridiculous?
I found a female author doing the same to a male character!

review
KarenUK
Foreign Affairs | Alison Lurie
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Pickpick

A super fun satire.... Two American professors, working and flailing about in London, navigating romance, aging ungracefully and generally being fishes out of the proverbial water. Lots of snark, fabulous dialogue, and gentle fun poking galore! Really enjoyed this delightful read....

47 likes8 stack adds
review
catebutler
Foreign Affairs | Alison Lurie
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Pickpick

I recently finished ‘Foreign Affairs‘ by Alison Lurie. I love when books take you by surprise, & this one definitely did. After a day or two of pondering, I scribbled down a few thoughts and posted a full review on the blog. I‘ve linked it below, if you‘d care to give it a read. Pairs well with a cup (or pot) of tea.

http://ramblingsofaredheadedsnippet.com/2020/05/19/book-review-foreign-affairs-b...

CarolynM This is a favourite of mine. Have you read any other Alison Lurie books? I like her a lot. 4y
catebutler @CarolynM This was my very first Lurie novel! But it won‘t be my last! I was talking to a friend who also read this, this month and she mentioned she thinks Lurie is quite underrated. Upon reading this, I agree! Do you have any specific titles you‘d recommend? 4y
CarolynM It was my first too, and probably still my favourite, but I also really liked Love and Friendship which is about Fred's (from Foreign Affairs) parents and he appears as a little boy (I remember the reference to his mother's story in FA "and Freddie HATES him") and The War Between the Tates is really good too. 4y
catebutler Ooh! I think that will be a great next read, since it involves characters from FA. Although, I did not care much for Fred at all in this book, Vinnie‘a sections were more interesting to me. Maybe he‘ll redeem himself as a child. 😊 Thank you so much for the recommendation! 4y
50 likes1 stack add4 comments
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KarenUK
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#Nextup
For this #pop2020 challenge, I‘ve decided to finally read this Pulitzer Prize winning novel that I‘ve been meaning to read forever! Apparently there is a documentary from 2016 about the Luxembourg Foreign Minister, with the same name, that‘s available on Prime. I may just watch the film too....the trailer made it look quirky and interesting 🤷‍♀️!

What is everyone else reading for this prompt?

CarolynM Foreign Affairs was my first Alison Lurie and it made me a fan. I loved it. Enjoy. (edited) 4y
KarenUK @carolynm I‘m not sure why I haven‘t gotten to it sooner! It sounds like just my jam! 💕😊 4y
Cinfhen I read a terrible nonfiction about Jeffrey Epstein titled Filthy Rich, which was also a TV series. Apparently a new TV series with that title is supposed to begin airing in June starring Kim Cantrell. And I recently read that Netflix is making a series based on the book I read about Jeffrey Epstein 4y
39 likes1 stack add3 comments
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CarolynM
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The first Alison Lurie novel I read and I loved it - it's an #OldFavorite #30JuneBooks

Centique I know this is on the TBR list in my physical journal somewhere - should move it up! 5y
78 likes2 stack adds1 comment
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Lcsmcat
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@CarolynM was the first person to like my first post, about the tagged book three years ago. #firstlike @Texreader

Texreader Awesome! Glad you looked for your #firstlike 5y
CarolynM Well, that was a nice surprise 🙂 Glad we're still exchanging likes 3 years later 😘 5y
44 likes3 comments
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Well-ReadNeck
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#TBRTuesday

Choosing from among these books for the coming week!!

Laissez le bon temps rouler!!

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Lcsmcat
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Lcsmcat
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review
eeclayton
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Mehso-so

Interesting book. While I appreciated the excellent character studies, the beautiful prose, and the spot-on social commentary, I can't say I enjoyed the novel very much. Perhaps that's because I found neither of the main characters likeable (nor most of the supporting cast, for that matter), I could feel no sympathy for them, and I couldn't honestly care whether they'd get happy endings or not.

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REPollock
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Pickpick

I adored this book. Sweet, hilarious snide humor often at the expense of academia, an unlikely romance abroad for middle-aged curmudgeons. What‘s not to love?

10 likes2 stack adds
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Lcsmcat
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Not many of my print books have a #PurpleCover, but I seem to have a lot of eBooks with covers in various shades. Here are 6; 5 I have read and recommend, the La Rochefoucauld is TBR. #aprilbookishmadness @maich

CarolynM I love Alison Lurie. Foreign Affairs was particularly good. 6y
Lcsmcat @CarolynM I really liked it, too. What else of hers have you read? 6y
CarolynM All the ones published before Foreign Affairs except Only Children. For some reason I could never get into the later ones, even though I tried. I think it might be an age thing and I should try them again now I'm a lot closer to the age of the characters 6y
50 likes3 comments
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Scfreads
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Finally finished. A recent Kindle deal.

3 likes1 stack add
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Lcsmcat

This made it to my to read list because of Lurie's connection to Key West and a planned literary trip there. Seven months after the trip I _finally_ started it, and wish I'd done so sooner. Not that the book has a Keys connection, it's just that good.

4 likes1 stack add