THE WORLD OF RAE ENGLISH


“Lucy Rosenthal has captured the heart and mind of a woman of our time, a player in the high stakes gamble on love and work. Savvy, moving and hilarious The World of Rae English brings an earthy American voice to our age of experience, updating the dilemmas Edith Wharton found in her own age of innocence.” —Josephine Hendin

The World of Rae English is set in the sixties–the era of Mad Men–relocated from Manhattan to Iowa City. This second novel by Lucy Rosenthal is about a young woman who is recovering from a marriage to a disgraced politician.

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“Lucy Rosenthal has captured the heart and mind of a woman of our time, a player in the high stakes gamble on love and work. Savvy, moving and hilarious The World of Rae English brings an earthy American voice to our age of experience, updating the dilemmas Edith Wharton found in her own age of innocence.” —Josephine Hendin

The World of Rae English is set in the sixties–the era of Mad Men–relocated from Manhattan to Iowa City. This second novel by Lucy Rosenthal is about a young woman who is recovering from a marriage to a disgraced politician. Once a rising political star, he has been brought down in a scandal and packed off to prison. After this, Rae English abandons New York for the University of Iowa’s Writers Workshop where she hopes to find herself as a writer and to investigate the possibilities of romance in the heartland. Funny, wryly observed and tinged with heartache, this is an unputdownable novel written in a brilliant voice that is at once tender and whip smart.

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  • Black Lawrence Press
  • Paperback
  • February 2014
  • 360 Pages
  • 9781937854393

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About Lucy Rosenthal

Lucy Rosenthal is the author of the novel The Ticket Out. The recipient of a Pulitzer Fellowship in Critical Writing, she has edited the anthologies Great American Love Stories, World Treasury of Love Stories, and The Eloquent Short Story: Varieties of Narration. She is on the writing faculty of Sarah Lawrence College and has also taught in the creative writing programs of Columbia and New York University. She lives in New York City.

Praise

“Lucy Rosenthal writes with the mirth and bite of the great Peter De Vries. I am amazed at how much fun she seems to be having while she fillets the pretentious and punctures the self-inflated. The smart reader will know enough to get out of her line of fire.”—Billy Collins

The World of Rae English is a rare novel of wry eloquence. Its remarkable sentences delineate a fifties and sixties world full of disguises, and we watch its heroine blunder through the task of unmasking those around her, past and present. A wonderful book.”—Joan Silber

Lucy Rosenthal’s The World of Rae English radiates the warmth, frankness and intelligence of its quirky heroine. In this uninhibited tale, Rosenthal perfectly captures the difficulties that smart women face in their search for love and self-definition. An absolutely addictive read.”—Patricia Bosworth

“A witty and memorable portrait of a woman sensitive to deceit and drawn to the deceitful. The World of Rae English, barbed and strewn with secrets, is also the world of a daughter searching for love and learning to let go. A knowing, stunning book.”—Dalia Sofer

Discussion Questions

1. Rae English’s story unfolds in the straight-laced early 60’s—the era of Mad Men—where women were expected to be married and pretty—and guarded. How would Lena Dunham and Rae English fare in each other’s worlds? How much has changed between then and now and in what way?

2. What do Rae’s objections to her environment—to Iowa City—reveal about her character? Could her story take place in more wide-open spaces like a big city, New York or Chicago? Would that change her? Would she make more friends?

3. Rae’s world is strewn with secrets. Whose are they? Can you pinpoint some of the secrets, large or small? Which one or ones would you say launch the story? Represent turning points? Or are in other ways crucial to it?

4. Would Rae’s father have had an easier life if he had been her contemporary instead of her father?

5. Is there anyone in the book who is a true friend to Rae? Who might that be?