This book explores the world of several elderly members of New York high society (as distinguished from the merely rich). It is a narrow world indeed consisting of lunch at "Swifty's", and marked by petty rivalries and grudges and a pathetic need for attention. However, author Dominick Dunne clea...
It actually helps to read the fiction books in order. I remember starting with The Two Mrs. Grenvilles; I'm not sure why. Perhaps I just remembered that he died about a year before my daughter, and I'd come across the fact that his own daughter, the actress Dominique Dunne, was murdered in her 20...
He could really write, Dominick Dunne, couldn't he? I know this was a fictionalised account of the Skakel murder of Martha Moxley, I know the Bradleys were the Kennedys, but still it read, at least in the initial chapters like Waugh's Brideshead. The same shining scion and his shadow, poor but i...
Dominick Dunne has met them all--stars and slugs, criminals and victims, the innocent and the hideously guilty--and now his two provocative collections of Vanity Fair portraits are in one irresistible volume. From posh Park Avenue duplexes to the extravagant mansions of Beverly Hills, from tastef...
There’re petals everywhere,” called Pauline the next morning from the top of the stairs. “Yes, Mrs. Mendelson,” replied Dudley, running up the stairs. Dudley treasured his employment with the illustrious Mendelson family, and wished things to continue as they had always been. It was no secret amo...