Tales of Sex & Suburban Lunacy

Fiction & Literature, Contemporary Women
Cover of the book Tales of Sex & Suburban Lunacy by Helen Argiro, BookBaby
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Helen Argiro ISBN: 9781624883569
Publisher: BookBaby Publication: February 6, 2013
Imprint: Language: English
Author: Helen Argiro
ISBN: 9781624883569
Publisher: BookBaby
Publication: February 6, 2013
Imprint:
Language: English
Tales of Sex & Suburban Lunacy picks up where the fairytale ends and the “…ever-after” begins. In an affluent town just north of Toronto a different kind of suburbanite has emerged. Well educated successful Gen X-ers with a misguided sense of entitlement, an insatiable appetite for luxury goods and a set of lifestyle choices that includes everything from Dr. Bernstein diets and recreational drug misuse, to the bizarre antics of the sexually deviant and scandalously promiscuous. And in the mix of dating, mating and moral dysfunction you’ll meet characters like Nina, forty-four, the divorced mother of twins who accidentally stumbles from one mortifying encounter to another in an effort to end a two-year long sexual drought. Madeline, fifty-two, single and stuck in online dating purgatory with a collection of horror stories acquired during her quest to find true love and join the ranks of the married middle-class. Jeannie, a forty-year-old TV producer and single mom with a gifted son, a sexy sadistic lawyer for an ex-husband and a gynecologist that is convinced Jeannie is a closet lesbian. So welcome to a place where illicit sex is plentiful, romantic love is as elusive as smoke, and where life is part comedy of communal errors and part tragic milieu of the corrosively ambitious. Welcome to the suburbs!
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Tales of Sex & Suburban Lunacy picks up where the fairytale ends and the “…ever-after” begins. In an affluent town just north of Toronto a different kind of suburbanite has emerged. Well educated successful Gen X-ers with a misguided sense of entitlement, an insatiable appetite for luxury goods and a set of lifestyle choices that includes everything from Dr. Bernstein diets and recreational drug misuse, to the bizarre antics of the sexually deviant and scandalously promiscuous. And in the mix of dating, mating and moral dysfunction you’ll meet characters like Nina, forty-four, the divorced mother of twins who accidentally stumbles from one mortifying encounter to another in an effort to end a two-year long sexual drought. Madeline, fifty-two, single and stuck in online dating purgatory with a collection of horror stories acquired during her quest to find true love and join the ranks of the married middle-class. Jeannie, a forty-year-old TV producer and single mom with a gifted son, a sexy sadistic lawyer for an ex-husband and a gynecologist that is convinced Jeannie is a closet lesbian. So welcome to a place where illicit sex is plentiful, romantic love is as elusive as smoke, and where life is part comedy of communal errors and part tragic milieu of the corrosively ambitious. Welcome to the suburbs!

More books from BookBaby

Cover of the book The Lynx and the Lioness: When a Sibling Kills! by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Two Rights by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book The Life and Death of a Country Store, A Memoir by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Right Distance, Wrong Direction by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book The Cowstail Keep by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Eye Of The Storm by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Carry On My Boys by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book B through Y by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Dracula - The Devil's Nosferatu by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Keys of Truth by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book The Doctors' Dictionary, 2nd edition by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book No Drums, No Trumpets by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Cebuano for Foreigners by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book Classy Poems by Helen Argiro
Cover of the book The Scalawag by Helen Argiro
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy