Private Lies

( 2 )

Overview

Warren Adler is the acclaimed author of 25 novels, published in 30 languages. Two of his books, "The War of the Roses" and "Random Hearts" were made into major motion pictures. He lives in Jackson Hole, Wyoming and New York City.

Ken and Sheila Kramer have a comfortable life and loving marriage. But when Ken is introduced to Carol, the wife of his wife's major client, we discover that she is Ken's old flame, the love of his life and the object of his sexual obsession as a young ...

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Private Lies

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Overview

Warren Adler is the acclaimed author of 25 novels, published in 30 languages. Two of his books, "The War of the Roses" and "Random Hearts" were made into major motion pictures. He lives in Jackson Hole, Wyoming and New York City.

Ken and Sheila Kramer have a comfortable life and loving marriage. But when Ken is introduced to Carol, the wife of his wife's major client, we discover that she is Ken's old flame, the love of his life and the object of his sexual obsession as a young man. Carol has totally reinvented herself and married a rich husband who has no knowledge of her early life. While unbeknownst to Ken, his wife is carrying on a steamy affair with her client, Carol's husband. When love and sexual obsession again bursts into flames between Ken and Carol, the plot of this masterful black comedy thickens as both couples embark on an African Safari with startling and tragic results.

The author of The War of the Roses surpasses himself with this powerful novel of love and betrayal, sexual passion and emotional obsession. It is storytelling at its dramatic best and once again shows Warren Adler's indisputable mastery of contemporary marital relationships.

"A masterpiece of gallows humor."

· New York Daily News

"Warren Adler does for infidelity and betrayal what his The War of the Roses did for incompatibility and greed. He has with delicious tension, carved out the state of matrimony as his exclusive theater of war."

· Fred Mustard Stewart, author of The Glitter and the Gold

"Adler at his steamy, schemey best¿ if you enjoyed the nice nastiness of The War of the Roses, this is right up your dastardly alley.

· Palm Springs Desert Sun

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Editorial Reviews

Fred Mustard Stewart
"In Private Lies, Warren Adler does for infidelity and betrayal what his The War of the Roses did for incompatibility and greed. With Private Lies he has, with delicious tension, carved out the state of matrimony as his exclusive theater of war." (Fred Mustard Stewart, author of Ellis Island and The Glitter and the Gold)
Nelson DeMille
Private Lies is as juicy and wicked a tale of love, lust, and adultery as Fatal Attraction. Warren Adler has a very fine ear for dialogue and a remarkable ability to plumb the depths of human passion and obsession. This novel should set the institution of marriage back ten years. (Nelson DeMille, author of The Gold Coast)
Doris Mortman
What a deliciously tangled web Warren Adler weaves in Private Lies! It's a story of love and deception among two couples with too much in common: secrets from the past . . . plans for the future . . . an African safari . . . a shocking, unexpected ending, all told with Warren Adler's special snap and crackle.( -Doris Mortman, author of Rightfully Mine)
Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly
Once again Adler ( War of the Roses ) focuses not on the redemptive power of love but on its capacity for destruction, in this case in the form of all-consuming sexual passion. When Ken Kramer and Carol Stein meet at a dinner arranged by their spouses, it has been 20 years since they ended their incendiary affair. Inexorably, the old erotic flame draws them together, but they are not the same people they once were. She, having failed as a professional ballerina, has married pompous Eliot Butterfield for his money; Eliot had hoped to become the next Hemingway but he's writing advertising copy instead. This is not, however, a story of lost dreams and new chances, for Ken and Carol are not the lone adulterers: antiseptic Maggie Kramer and Carol's formerly stodgy hubby have discovered orgasmic ecstasy in each other. Before the philandering foursome heads off on safari (from which only three will return) of stolen moments among famished crocodiles and stampeding elephants, this elegantly rollicking story loses some of its oomph. The black comedy lurches toward slapstick. Author tour. (Apr.)
Library Journal
Passionate lovers in their youth, Carol and Ken meet again 20 years later, when their spouses develop a business arrangement. They keep their previous relationship a secret, and soon renew their affair, devising a plan to rid themselves of both mates by enabling them to fall in love with each other. This is not the stuff that great romances are made of, and the interest spurred by the story of Ken and Carol's young lives is checked by their development as selfish, flat, middle-aged adults. Even more tedious is their constant whining about unfulfilled, youthful career aspirations, he as a Hemingway imitator, she as a ballerina. Not a credible addition to this established author's large body of work, but expect demand considering that Adler penned the popular book (then film) War of the Roses (Warner, 1981). Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 12/90.-- Lydia Burruel Johnson, Mesa P.L., Ariz.
Chris Vadman
Private Lies will take you from the streets of Manhattan to the arid African plains. Intrigue and secretive liaisons involving "couple friends" Elliot and Carol Butterfield and Ken and Maggie Kramer are mediated by safari guide Jack Meade, a character straight out of a Hemingway short story.

Through his characters, Adler examines how duplicity can be expanded and adapted and is analyzed to suit the liar's purpose. The cha
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9781931304658
  • Publisher: Stonehouse Press
  • Publication date: 3/1/2001
  • Pages: 348
  • Product dimensions: 5.50 (w) x 8.50 (h) x 0.78 (d)

Meet the Author

Warren Adler is best known for The War of the Roses, his masterpiece fictionalization of a macabre divorce turned into the Golden Globe and BAFTA nominated dark comedy hit starring Michael Douglas, Kathleen Turner and Danny DeVito. In addition to the success of the stage adaptation of his iconic novel on the perils of divorce, Adler has optioned and sold film rights to more than a dozen of his novels and short stories to Hollywood and major television networks. Random Hearts (starring Harrison Ford and Kristen Scott Thomas), The Sunset Gang (starring Jerry Stiller, Uta Hagen, Harold Gould and Doris Roberts), Private Lies, Funny Boys, Madeline’s Miracles, Trans-Siberian Express and his Fiona Fitzgerald mystery series are only a few titles that have forever left Adler’s mark on contemporary American authorship from page to stage to screen. Learn more about Warren Adler.
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Read an Excerpt

IT ALL BEGAN, as Ken perceived it, with a sudden fit of precognition, and he knew instantly that the mooring lines that stabilized his life were about to show the first signs of major slippage. He had been observing this couple just coming out of the slanting April rain all aflutter and out of breath as they shook off drops from their raincoats before handing them over to the hatcheck girl at Pumpkins, the pricey restaurant on Second Avenue, Maggie’s choice, where the cooking was West Coast eclectic and the atmosphere luxury-liner Art Deco. Ken, who was sitting facing the restaurant’s entrance, saw her first in profile as she patted her cheeks dry with a tissue. Couldn’t be, he decided at first, realizing suddenly that he had actually searched for her face in crowds for more than two decades. Of course, he tried denying it, knowing it was the trigger to this precognition. No Way. This could not be Carol Stein. The process of aging cannot stand still. Yet he could not tear his gaze away. There was that same easy grace of the floating swan, the same question-mark dancer’s posture, the same high-cheekboned cat’s face, the same angled head, emphasizing the sharp line of tilted chin overhanging the long, thin, white neck. Aside from the emotional power of this hard punch to the solar plexus of his psyche, his physical reactions, too, took him by surprise. His heart seemed to skip a beat, many beats. His back broke out into a cold sweat and his throat ran dry. Then his wife, Maggie, waved and the tall man in the blue double-breasted wide pinstripe and elegant gold-and-blue-striped tie beside this replica of Carol Stein acknowledged the gesture with a movementof his own, tapping the shoulder of the woman who could not be Carol Stein. He watched her move toward him with a ballerina’s dainty precision, her body gliding in step with some inner rhythm that made her long challis skirt seem driven by a gentle breeze over soft kid boots. The movement seemed to have a remembered signature, vibrating an old erotic chord within him. Was this Carol Stein walking into his life after twenty-three years? He felt a blast of heat from that old furnace, firing up the passion and possession that had inflamed his youthful soul. As she came closer, denial faltered and he felt trapped with all exits closed off. He would be an exhibit for her to observe and gloat over. Another tide of anxiety washed over him as he imagined the bloated remains of his former being lying on a cold slab awaiting Carol Stein’s coroner’s knife. Who could hide one’s failure from that kind of scrutiny? He felt ashamed, the bitter bile of his lost dreams on the verge of exposure. Suddenly there was no place to hide.
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Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4.5
( 2 )
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Sort by: Showing all of 2 Customer Reviews
  • Anonymous

    Posted September 26, 2001

    Make this a movie!

    Amazing - just when you think you know what's going to happen next, the story changes direction. The African scenery was to die for - thus my headline - just as scary and I imagine a trip to the wilds would be. And please...do not read the last few paragraphs...it will ruin the story for you.

    1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
  • Posted February 9, 2012

    Lush African scenery mingled with wonderful psychological drama!

    PRIVATE LIES is a mesmerizing read, starting with the powerful voice of Ken Kramer in the opening pages. I’m not going to provide a detailed plot summary, other than to say that this novel is a commanding glimpse into the minds of four very distinct characters. Mr. Adler rotates between these points of view, from a dispirited writer who has lost his dream and now settles for a job writing ads (Ken), to his long ago ballerina lover with whom he parted ways twenty years earlier and who he now runs into by a pure twist of fate (Carol), to his loving and enthusiastic wife, a virtual “earth mother,” who has organized his life and bore him two children (Maggie), to the final corner of this very odd rhombus, a self-engrossed, gourmand who’s always touting his latest “cause” and who can talk the best dinner partners under the table (Eliot).

    One is immediately plunged into mystery and suspense when the story opens with a chance meeting between Ken, his wife Maggie, her new client Eliot, and his spouse, Carol. Ken knows she’s Carol—his past lover—yet she doesn’t acknowledge him. Not a glance, no eye contact, no conversation. Ken spends the whole evening wonder if this ethereal, swan-necked, divine creature is really the woman with whom he spent months of hot passion two decades ago. He’s positive it’s her; but why does she pretend not to know him?

    Little by little, delicious secrets are unveiled. We discover Carol’s past, which I won’t divulge here, and finally get a peak into her mind.

    I expected the story would stay in New York, set in apartments and coffee shops and restaurants, when suddenly the plot twists and we are airlifted to Africa!

    The contrast between the scenes in the dark, dirty city to Africa are vibrantly divergent. Africa—land of the parching sun, torrential downpours, rare danger, and raw resplendent beauty—invades the minds of the quartet by unleashing inner urges, some not so pretty. The land influences and entices, invades sensible thoughts and tempts all four to go where they hadn’t dared before.

    If it seems like I’m being cryptic here, I am. I don’t want to spoil the plot.

    There are several twists in this story that made me stand up and applaud. Well done, Mr. Adler! It was these twists that grabbed my attention and made me love the book even more. As they should, secrets are unveiled and the plot runs wild with surprises coming in more frequent waves toward the end. Most satisfying.

    I would recommend this book for adults only, particularly those who aren’t shy about reading delicately described sexual encounters. These tastefully drawn passages of great passion were evocative and sensual, adding to the texture of this finely woven literary tapestry. As in THE DAVID EMBRACE, Mr. Adler writes voluptuous and fiery passages when it comes to passion in the bedroom, or in the mind.

    I’ve heard that PRIVATE LIES was up for a movie, and that was one of my first thoughts when I finished it. “What a great movie PRIVATE LIES would make!” I do hope that Hollywood grabs hold of this one and runs with it.

    I highly recommend PRIVATE LIES for the thinking man or woman, and for those who enjoy diabolical, twisty plots and lush scenery.

    Was this review helpful? Yes  No   Report this review
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