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Review Quotes: Praise for Unseasonably Cold "New York, 1939: A year has passed since Jane Henry, a popular columnist and heiress to a publishing fortune, vanished without a trace. No one's taken the news quite so hard as her best friend, Liza Simon, the last person Jane lunched with before her disappearance. Liza has never been able to forget one of the last things Jane said to her: 'Billy...has turned unseasonably cold.' . . . Told in quick chapters that add to the sense of mystery and fragmented memory, this story will appeal to readers of crime fiction and literary fiction alike. A spare historical thriller about trusting the wrong people. Our Verdict: Get It!" -Kirkus Reviews "The brilliant Amy Ephron has written a story steeped inmystery, suspense, and glamour set in Art Deco chic New York City in 1939. A socialite, surrounded by the wealthy, nefarious, and artistic, goes missing. Atmospheric. Propulsive. Captivating. Pure Amy." - Adriana Trigiani, best-selling author of The View From Lake Como "I was enthralled from the first page to the very last. Amy Ephron's Unseasonably Cold is a fascinating, compelling read that I thought about for a long time after. It's not a book to be missed." - Jill Santopolo, New York Times best-selling author of The Light We Lost "A socialite disappears in late-1930s New York City, and welcome to Unseasonably Cold, Amy Ephron's elegant, melancholy noir of secrets, misapprehensions, and deceptions, aristocrats and bohemians, Park Avenue and Greenwich Village. Replete with beautifully observed period detail and sharply drawn characterizations. It's altogether intriguing - haunting, even - and I couldn't have enjoyed myself more." - Benjamin Dreyer, New York Times best-selling author of Dreyer's English "A brilliant who-done-it and an atmospheric page-turner. I couldn't put it down! Bravo, Amy!!" - Steven Raichlen, internationally best-selling author, renowned grill guy, The Barbecue Bible, and The Beer Can Chicken Book Praise for other Amy Ephron Books "An elegant love story . . . as exquisitely sculpted as fine Porcelain." -Entertainment Weekly on A Cup of Tea "The narrator talks out of an existential corner of her mouth in tones sometimes reminiscent of Philip Marlowe, sometimes of the Joan Didion of Play It as It Lays. The voice it introduces as a real and unusual power." -Madison Smart Bell, New York Times, on Cool Shades "Amy Ephron scores with her glamorously gritty second novel, Bruised Fruit." -Angela Janklow, Vanity Fair, on Bruised Fruit "You could, I think, make the case that Amy Ephron is our Wharton . . . Her books are not so much written as carved. Every word counts . . . the story is set in 1927, and so, very much bubbling under the Society plot, is the reckless mood of that era. Alcohol. Drugs. Homosexuality. These add a Fitzgeraldian spice to the strict moral tale that is Ephron's legacy from Wharton . . . It turns out that quite a lot can happen in 214 pages - that is, when the writer is a master storyteller like Amy Ephron." -Jesse Kornbluth, on One Sunday Morning Publisher Marketing: "A spare historical thriller about trusting the wrong people. Our verdict: Get it!" -Kirkus Reviews "Unseasonably Cold's atmosphere is Wharton and Towles; its page-turning plot is pure Christie." - Airmail Weekly A socialite living in late-1930s New York City disappears without a trace in Unseasonably Cold, Amy Ephron's elegant, melancholy noir of secrets, misapprehensions, and deceptions. Replete with beautifully observed period detail and sharply drawn characters, Unseasonably Cold is classic storytelling, a mystery crafted with an artist's eye. Rendered in Ephron's lovely, austere literary prose, it is utterly worthy of the era it depicts, when the polite mask of high society's mannered calm disguised the turbulence just beneath; a mirror for the terrible events swirling in Europe at the lead-up to the Second World War. * The Historical Novel Society calls Unseasonably Cold Amy Ephron's "noir-ish 1939 mystery . . . The plot hinges on a police investigation, the multiple family ties, romantic entanglements, hidden and not so hidden relationships.""Altogether intriguing-haunting, even-and I couldn't have enjoyed myself more." -Benjamin Dreyer, author of the New York Times bestseller Dreyer's English "Atmospheric. Propulsive. Captivating. Pure Amy." -Adriana Trigiani, bestselling author of The View from Lake Como "I was enthralled from the first page to the very last. A fascinating, compelling read that I thought about for a long time after. It's not a book to be missed." -Jill Santopolo, New York Times best-selling author of The Light We Lost "It's a Faberge egg of a novel. Perfect in detail and execution. Ephron's prose is so incredibly sparse and compelling. I was very taken with it." - Holly Goldberg Sloan, best-selling author.
Contributor Bio:Ephron, Amy |
