Kissing in Manhattan

Stories

Fiction & Literature, Short Stories, Literary
Cover of the book Kissing in Manhattan by David Schickler, Random House Publishing Group
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: David Schickler ISBN: 9780440333821
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group Publication: August 27, 2002
Imprint: Delta Language: English
Author: David Schickler
ISBN: 9780440333821
Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
Publication: August 27, 2002
Imprint: Delta
Language: English

Hilarious, sexy, and deeply tender, Kissing in Manhattan was one of the most celebrated debuts in recent years. Acclaimed author David Schickler’s collection of linked stories follows a troupe of love-hungry urbanites through a charmed metropolis and into the Preemption--a mythic Manhattan apartment building. The Preemption sets the stage for a romantic fantasy as exuberant, dark, and dazzling as the city it occupies. Behind closed doors, the paths of an improbable cast of tenants--a seductive perfume heiress; a crabby, misunderstood actor; a preternaturally sharp-sighted priest--tangle and cross, while a perilous love triangle builds around three characters:

James Branch, a shy young accountant with an unusual love for the Preemption’s antique elevator, and a strange destiny...

Patrick Rigg, a Wall Street lothario who soothes his pain by seducing
beautiful women, carrying a gun, and attending the nightly sermons of a foreboding priest...

Rally McWilliams, a fetching, hopeful young writer who roams the city at night, searching for the soulmate she believes in but can’t find...

Charged with joy and a deadly sense of humor, Kissing in Manhattan is a daring new writer’s vision of a world where men and women, good and evil, love and sex, meet, battle, and embrace on every street corner.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Hilarious, sexy, and deeply tender, Kissing in Manhattan was one of the most celebrated debuts in recent years. Acclaimed author David Schickler’s collection of linked stories follows a troupe of love-hungry urbanites through a charmed metropolis and into the Preemption--a mythic Manhattan apartment building. The Preemption sets the stage for a romantic fantasy as exuberant, dark, and dazzling as the city it occupies. Behind closed doors, the paths of an improbable cast of tenants--a seductive perfume heiress; a crabby, misunderstood actor; a preternaturally sharp-sighted priest--tangle and cross, while a perilous love triangle builds around three characters:

James Branch, a shy young accountant with an unusual love for the Preemption’s antique elevator, and a strange destiny...

Patrick Rigg, a Wall Street lothario who soothes his pain by seducing
beautiful women, carrying a gun, and attending the nightly sermons of a foreboding priest...

Rally McWilliams, a fetching, hopeful young writer who roams the city at night, searching for the soulmate she believes in but can’t find...

Charged with joy and a deadly sense of humor, Kissing in Manhattan is a daring new writer’s vision of a world where men and women, good and evil, love and sex, meet, battle, and embrace on every street corner.

More books from Random House Publishing Group

Cover of the book Amazing Grace by David Schickler
Cover of the book Healing Mantras by David Schickler
Cover of the book Thirteen Moons by David Schickler
Cover of the book Get Happy by David Schickler
Cover of the book Dark Tide Rising by David Schickler
Cover of the book Omerta by David Schickler
Cover of the book Last Breath by David Schickler
Cover of the book The Kin of Ata Are Waiting for You by David Schickler
Cover of the book Frankenstein: Dead and Alive by David Schickler
Cover of the book Homer & Langley by David Schickler
Cover of the book White Houses by David Schickler
Cover of the book L.A. Requiem by David Schickler
Cover of the book The Bourne Identity by David Schickler
Cover of the book Inherit the Wind by David Schickler
Cover of the book The Escort by David Schickler
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