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Fritz Agency
Christian Dittus
Original language
English

THE VIXEN

Francine Prose

It's 1953, and Simon Putnam, a recent Harvard graduate newly hired by a distinguished New York publishing firm, has entered a glittering world of three-martini lunches, exclusive literary parties, and old-money aristocrats in exquisitely tailored suits, a far cry from his loving, middle-class Jewish family in Coney Island.

But Simon's first assignment—editing The Vixen, the Patriot and the Fanatic, a lurid bodice-ripper improbably based on the recent trial and execution of Ethel and Julius Rosenberg, a potboiler intended to shore up the firm's failing finances—makes him question the cost of admission. Because Simon has a secret that, at the height of the Red Scare and the McCarthy hearings, he cannot reveal: his beloved mother was a childhood friend of Ethel Rosenberg's. His parents mourn Ethel's death.

Simon's dilemma grows thornier when he meets The Vixen's author, the startlingly beautiful, reckless, seductive Anya Partridge, ensconced in her opium-scented boudoir in a luxury Hudson River mental asylum. As mysteries deepen, as the confluence of sex, money, politics and power spirals out of Simon's control, he must face what he's lost by exchanging the loving safety of his middle-class Jewish parents' Coney Island apartment for the witty, whiskey-soaked orbit of his charismatic boss, the legendary Warren Landry. Gradually Simon realizes that the people around him are not what they seem, that everyone is keeping secrets, that ordinary events may conceal a diabolical plot—and that these crises may steer him toward a brighter future.

At once domestic and political, contemporary and historic, funny and heartbreaking, enlivened by surprising plot turns and passages from Anya's hilariously bad novel, The Vixen illuminates a period of history with eerily striking similarities to the current moment. Meanwhile it asks timeless questions: How do we balance ambition and conscience? What do social mobility and cultural assimilation require us to sacrifice? How do we develop an authentic self, discover a vocation, and learn to live with the mysteries of love, family, art, life and loss?

Francine Prose is the author of twenty-one works of fiction, including Mister Monkey; the New York Times bestseller Lovers at the Chameleon Club, Paris 1932; A Changed Man, which won the Dayton Literary Peace Prize; and Blue Angel, a finalist for the National Book Award. Her works of nonfiction include Anne Frank: The Book, The Life, The Afterlife, and the New York Times bestseller Reading Like a Writer. The recipient of numerous grants and honors, including a Guggenheim, a Fulbright, and a Director's Fellow at the Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library, she is a former president of PEN American Center and a member of the American Academy of Arts and Letters and the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
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Published 2021-06-01 by HarperCollins

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Book trailer Read more...

Russia: Knizhniki

Smart, assured fiction from a master storyteller and thoughtful social commentator. Read more...

[...] Who was seduced and lied to by whom in 1951-53? Who is being seduced and lied to now? The Vixen plays constantly with the boundaries between fact and fiction; by pushing the fictional absurdity to parodic extremes, Prose underscores the tragic absurdity of real events. Read more...

[...] Depending on the light, it's either a very funny serious story or a very serious funny story. But no matter how you turn it, "The Vixen" offers an illuminating reflection on the slippery nature of truth in America, then and now. Read more...

In an enthralling new novel, Francine Prose, a maestro storyteller, interrogates the murky symbiotic relationship between history and individuals: is it the senselessness of history that undermines and rewrites each person's life story, or, is it a collection of cruelties from individuals that change the course of history? Equally suspenseful and philosophical, THE VIXEN is both a page tuner set in an era of espionage, conspiracy and mistrust, and an exploration of one of the sustaining factors of civilization that also has to sustain perennial attack from politics and history: human decency. -- Yiyun Li, author of THE VAGRANTS: A NOVEL

Can a novel be wildly intelligent, deeply compassionate, politically astute and utterly absorbing? In her dazzling new novel Francine Prose accomplishes all of this, and more, as she explores the fate of the Rosenbergs and the travails of an editorial assistant new to both publishing and love. THE VIXEN is irresistible. -- Margot Livesey, author of THE BOY IN THE FIELD

A neophyte editor is lost in a labyrinth of literary deception, Cold War betrayal and long-planned revenge, all under the shadow of an execution... Read more...

WSHU Public Radio Review Read more...

A rollicking trickster of a novel, wondrously funny and wickedly addictive. -- Maria Semple, author of Where'd You Go, Bernadette Prose is a powerhouse. THE VIXEN will fascinate and complicate the histories that haunt our present moments. Like Coney Island's Cyclone, this story tumbles and tangles a reader's grip of reality. It's told with the heart, humor and daring of a true artist. Prose's THE VIXEN is a triumph and a trip though the solid magic that books make real. -- Samantha Hunt, author of The Invention of Everything Else

The Forward Profile. Read more...

[...] Francine Prose writes sentences that make me laugh out loud ...The gift of her work to a reader is to create for us what she creates for her protagonist: the subtle unfolding, the moment-by-moment process of discovery as we read and change, from not knowing and even not wanting to know or care, to seeing what we had not seen and finding our way to the light of the ending. Read more...

[...] It is a testament to Prose's mastery as a storyteller that what emerges is a penetrating look at the underside of comedy -- namely, how the human condition can be so predictably cruel and paranoid. Read more...