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The Princess of 72nd Street


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This remarkable novel by Elaine Kraf received almost no attention when it was first published in 1979. For whatever reasons, America was not ready for this dream-like look at life inside the head of a young woman, a struggling artist, living in New York's Upper West Side and coping with the ravages of manic-depression.

Not only did Kraf take on a dark and disturbing subject, she did so in an utterly original, witty, and inventive manner—a provocative move, even in the liberated culture of the 1970s. And, while others have since expanded upon the territory that Kraf was mining, one still has to go as far back as the early down-and-out-in-Paris novels of Jean Rhys to find a writer who so boldly and honestly portrays a smart, sardonic, attractive, but deeply troubled woman fighting to survive on her own in the city.

Details

ISBN-10 1-56478-235-2
ISBN-13 9781564782359
Publication Date Apr 2000
Nb of pages 118
Dimensions 5.5 x 8.5 in.

Reviews

Press Reviews

Library Journal
A psychological fairy tale in which a princess loses her kingdom—and with it both immaturity and transcendence . . . With a pathetic penetration that seldom fails, the author relates her character's plight, tracing a distressed yet hopeful return to the mundane world.

Minnesota Monthly
Fantasy verging on tragedy which is also very funny and very real . . . The ending of this short novel . . . has the impact and tragic honesty which most books twice the length aim for and trip over.

Village Voice
The Princess of 72nd Street is an inside look at a Broadway crazy of the scarf-on-mouth, see-through blouse, vaselined hair variety . . . Kraf writes ironically about the habits of madness without trivializing the grimness and pain.

Booklist
There are astonishingly affecting contrasts of the sordid and sad, the detached and misaligned. The Princess of 72nd Street is a serious, important piece of contemporary fiction.

New York Times Book Review
When a novelist tells a good story well, it becomes a good novel. When a novelist uses words as if they were sacred love, what is written becomes poetry. Elaine Kraf is a poet.



Quotations

Elaine Kraf's ability to transfuse her characters with a vibrant, often terrifying reality, startles the reader anew on almost every page.
-Kay Boyle

Elaine Kraf is really first rate.
-Christina Stead

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Genres : Fiction : Jewish-American
Genres : Fiction : United States and Canada
Countries : United States of America


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