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La Trilogia Calloway

Questa serie si addentra nel vertiginoso e pericoloso mondo della finanza e dell'editoria durante il boom di New York negli anni '80. Segue individui ambiziosi che navigano la 'corsa all'oro', dove la ricerca di ricchezza e fama spesso si scontra con compromessi morali. Le narrazioni esplorano la complessa interazione tra aspirazioni personali e le dure realtà del successo e del fallimento. I lettori troveranno storie avvincenti sul confrontarsi con l'età adulta, piene di arguzia, vulnerabilità e l'occasionale lotta per l'integrità.

Bright, Precious Days
The Good Life
Brightness falls

Ordine di lettura consigliato

  1. Brightness falls

    • 415pagine
    • 15 ore di lettura

    A novel about men and women confronting their sudden middle age with wit and low behaviour, or fear and confusion, or honesty and decency. None of them would ever be the same again.

    Brightness falls1
    3,8
  2. The Good Life

    • 354pagine
    • 13 ore di lettura

    James Frey reviews Jay McInerney's work, noting the lasting impact of "Bright Lights, Big City," released in 1984. Despite its significance, many have forgotten McInerney's subsequent works. His career has seen both highs and lows, paralleling F. Scott Fitzgerald's trajectory, marked by early success and personal struggles. While Fitzgerald produced a masterpiece in "The Great Gatsby," McInerney's journey through life's ups and downs may prove equally compelling. His latest book, "The Good Life," is described as his best since "Bright Lights." It follows two Manhattan couples around the time of September 11th: Luke and Sasha, wealthy socialites, and Russell and Corrine, a literary editor and his wife. Both couples are disillusioned, grappling with love and family dynamics. Luke, a banker seeking fulfillment, faces infidelity, while Corrine feels neglected. Their paths converge at a soup kitchen near Ground Zero, where they find love and hope amidst tragedy. McInerney's narrative is a poignant exploration of marriage, loss, and the search for meaning, reflecting his own experiences. Unlike Fitzgerald, who faced a tragic end, McInerney's resilience shines through, offering a glimpse of what a sustained literary career can yield.

    The Good Life2
    3,3
  3. This unforgettable New York story of glamour, sex, ambition, and heartbreak begins in the heady days before the financial crash. Russell and Corrine Calloway seem to be living the dream: a calendar filled with high-society parties; jobs they care about and enjoy; twin children, a boy and a girl whose birth was truly miraculous; a loft in TriBeCa and summers in the Hamptons. But beneath the glossy surfaces, things are simmering. Russell, editor-in-chief of a boutique publisher, has cultural clout but is on the edge financially, and feels compelled to pursue an audacious—and potentially ruinous—opportunity. Meanwhile, Corrine’s world is turned upside down when the man with whom she’d had an ill-fated affair in the wake of 9/11 suddenly reappears, and the Calloways find themselves tested more severely than they ever could have imagined. The third book in McInerney’s celebrated Calloway trilogy, Bright, Precious Days is an aching, extraordinary portrait of a marriage during a period of dizzying change.

    Bright, Precious Days3
    3,4