I love Stephen McCauley's books, all of them! I've read every single thing he's ever written, and I'm looking forward to the next one. I was very ecstatic, to my surprise, to have found out by accident that he wrote a new one: Insignificant Others. Fortunately, I was traveling to Ecuador at th...
La segunda novela de McCauley que leo pero, a diferencia de "El objeto de mi afecto" quedé enganchado al verme indiscutiblemente identificado con el personaje principal que vive en un mundo corporativo, envuelto en pensamientos de mediana edad y tratando de definir con claridad cuales son los sig...
Random: the comment about not having taste but opinions about others at the bottom of page two made me say "hah" and then suddenly think about how this book was so "American", it just popped into my head that American books always have their books, heroes, whatever take themselves as important, B...
“The only time love works,” maintains one of the characters in The Easy Way Out, “is when two people are deceiving themselves in exactly the same way.” Stephen McCauley’s novel is spiked with cynical confidences like that, mostly supplied by Patrick O’Neill, the narrator, who early on confesses t...