Finding a Separate Way
Sean Carlyle and Carol Tripodi graduated together from Washington University in St. Louis, just as they had from kindergarten through every school since, including elementary school, middle school, and high school. Their families lived blocks from each other on the Upper East Side and socialized frequently. Sean and Carol were best friends until two years ago when they became intimate, which led to plans for a future together.
At spring break during their senior year, Sean decided to break off their intimacy and wanted each of them to find a separate way from each other, despite acknowledging that they would always be friends. Carol was shocked, disappointed, and sad. Most of all, she was confused. Sean dropped this revelation during one of their long walks in Central Park. Sean refused to tell her the real reason. He had become bothered by a vision impairment that had afflicted Carol since the age of five. Sean was disturbed by his own superficiality as much as Carol was by his dramatic about-face, leaving no room for Carol to discover the real reason.
Simultaneously, both Sean and Carol planned to take new jobs, Carol in finance at Chase while Sean hoped to leverage an editor's job at McGraw-Hill into a literary career, as one of his idols, William Styron, had done. As this new employment remained on track for both, the professional pursuit of success was radically undercut by the change in personal lifestyles and circumstances. The consequential tension and turmoil roiled both Sean and Carol but affected Carol more.
Sean and Carol, despite their separate ways, remained friends but that friendship was tested by Sean's involvement with other women, and even with Carol's own mother, Jane. Fortunately, they met new people, who became abiding friends, and they progressed professionally in ways that surprised each of them.
1146224805
Finding a Separate Way
Sean Carlyle and Carol Tripodi graduated together from Washington University in St. Louis, just as they had from kindergarten through every school since, including elementary school, middle school, and high school. Their families lived blocks from each other on the Upper East Side and socialized frequently. Sean and Carol were best friends until two years ago when they became intimate, which led to plans for a future together.
At spring break during their senior year, Sean decided to break off their intimacy and wanted each of them to find a separate way from each other, despite acknowledging that they would always be friends. Carol was shocked, disappointed, and sad. Most of all, she was confused. Sean dropped this revelation during one of their long walks in Central Park. Sean refused to tell her the real reason. He had become bothered by a vision impairment that had afflicted Carol since the age of five. Sean was disturbed by his own superficiality as much as Carol was by his dramatic about-face, leaving no room for Carol to discover the real reason.
Simultaneously, both Sean and Carol planned to take new jobs, Carol in finance at Chase while Sean hoped to leverage an editor's job at McGraw-Hill into a literary career, as one of his idols, William Styron, had done. As this new employment remained on track for both, the professional pursuit of success was radically undercut by the change in personal lifestyles and circumstances. The consequential tension and turmoil roiled both Sean and Carol but affected Carol more.
Sean and Carol, despite their separate ways, remained friends but that friendship was tested by Sean's involvement with other women, and even with Carol's own mother, Jane. Fortunately, they met new people, who became abiding friends, and they progressed professionally in ways that surprised each of them.
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Finding a Separate Way

Finding a Separate Way

by John Samsel
Finding a Separate Way

Finding a Separate Way

by John Samsel

Hardcover

$21.86 
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Overview

Sean Carlyle and Carol Tripodi graduated together from Washington University in St. Louis, just as they had from kindergarten through every school since, including elementary school, middle school, and high school. Their families lived blocks from each other on the Upper East Side and socialized frequently. Sean and Carol were best friends until two years ago when they became intimate, which led to plans for a future together.
At spring break during their senior year, Sean decided to break off their intimacy and wanted each of them to find a separate way from each other, despite acknowledging that they would always be friends. Carol was shocked, disappointed, and sad. Most of all, she was confused. Sean dropped this revelation during one of their long walks in Central Park. Sean refused to tell her the real reason. He had become bothered by a vision impairment that had afflicted Carol since the age of five. Sean was disturbed by his own superficiality as much as Carol was by his dramatic about-face, leaving no room for Carol to discover the real reason.
Simultaneously, both Sean and Carol planned to take new jobs, Carol in finance at Chase while Sean hoped to leverage an editor's job at McGraw-Hill into a literary career, as one of his idols, William Styron, had done. As this new employment remained on track for both, the professional pursuit of success was radically undercut by the change in personal lifestyles and circumstances. The consequential tension and turmoil roiled both Sean and Carol but affected Carol more.
Sean and Carol, despite their separate ways, remained friends but that friendship was tested by Sean's involvement with other women, and even with Carol's own mother, Jane. Fortunately, they met new people, who became abiding friends, and they progressed professionally in ways that surprised each of them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9798218982829
Publisher: John Samsel
Publication date: 08/14/2024
Pages: 364
Sales rank: 421,468
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.94(d)

About the Author

John Samsel was born in 1943 in Aurora, Missouri. He studied English literature at the University of Missouri-Kansas City and at Washington University in St. Louis. For a time after graduate school, he taught in the English department at Missouri State University, Maryville. Most of his career, however, has been spent in New York City and the region where he founded and operated a telecommunications company. Currently, he lives in Fairfield, CT.
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