Praise for My Ex-Life :
National Bestseller now in paperback
An Indie Next Pick for May 2018 and 2019
“One of the best books, as far as I’m concerned, this year is My Ex-Life by Stephen McCauley. It is quirky and funny and beautifully observed.” Jane Green on NBC’s Today Show
“Warm, very funny and observant…In his adroit and affecting new novel, My Ex-Life , he revisits the emotional territory of that first novel: the special closeness that may arise between a gay man and a straight woman.” San Francisco Chronicle
“A clever novel about exes reconnecting…Do not underestimate McCauley’s witty insights or his ability to make middle-aged, sexless companionship seem wildly appealing.” People (Book of the Week)
“A charming slice of life about former spouses (one gay, one straight) on the other side of 50 who have been kicked around by life but find purpose when they reconnect in a seaside Massachusetts town. Laughs included.” Entertainment Weekly
“With My Ex-Life , a heartwarming comedy of manners about second chances and starting afresh, he has pretty much outdone himself…McCauley fires off witticisms like a tennis ace practicing serves…In the vein of inveterate beguilers like Laurie Colwin, Elinor Lipman, and Maria Semple, McCauley is warm but snappy, light but smartand just plain enjoyable.” NPR.org
“My Ex-Life is a pleasure of the deepest sortit’s a wise, ruefully funny, and ultimately touching exploration of mid-life melancholy and unexpected second chances. Stephen McCauley is a wonderful writer, and this may be his best book yet.” Tom Perrotta , bestselling author of Mrs. Fletcher
“My Ex-Life is a rich, yet delicate ragout of wonderfully vivid characters, hilarious dialogue, and spot-on cultural criticism. It satisfies on every level.” Richard Russo , bestselling author of Everybody’s Fool
“Before you read My Ex-Life , make sure the person you sleep with is willing to be woken constantly by your laughter. Stephen McCauley writes sparkling, graceful, witty prose with an ease and fluency that seems like sleight-of-hand. If I were the kind of reader who highlighted brilliant passages, the whole entire book would be underlined.” Katherine Heiny , author of Standard Deviation
“From the first page of My Ex-Life , I was sending Stephen McCauley mental valentines and figurative fan notes, thanking him for this delicious, smart, funny novel, its endearing characters, and his wry, big-hearted cynicism. Oh, if all books could be like this one!” Elinor Lipman , author of On Turpentine Lane
“My Ex-Life is Steve McCauley’s best novel so farand that’s saying a lot. For those of us who devoured his previous books and eagerly awaited another, My Ex-Life is cause for celebration. McCauley’s trademark wit and cultural commentary is all here, as is a cast of smart, complicated, heart-sore characters…. You’re going to love My Ex-Life .” Anita Diamant , author of The Boston Girl and The Red Tent
“This wonderful novel has its finger on the pulse of the present, but the questions it asksabout family and the ineluctable past and the strange, sustaining grace of friendshipare as timeless as the elegance and craft of its prose. Stephen McCauley is a master, one of our wisest and funniest observers of American life.” Garth Greenwell , author of What Belongs to You
“McCauley delights with intimately, often hilariously observed characters and a winking wit that lets plenty of honest tenderness shine through. Readers will love spending time in these pages.” Booklist (starred review)
“Wickedly funny…. For all the idiosyncrasies of McCauley’s creations, it’s likely many readers will see aspects of their own lives reflected in these pages.” BookPage
“McCauley’s effervescent prose is full of wit and wisdom on every topiccollege application essays, Airbnb operation, weed addiction, live porn websites, and, most of all, people....A gin and tonic for the soul.” Kirkus
“This comedy of manners is a summery confection tinged with awareness of a coming autumn.” Publishers Weekly
“It’s hard to convey the sheer joy of reading McCauley’s effervescent, penetrating prose that can be simultaneously hilarious and heart-breaking.” Bay Area Reporter
“A smart, fun novel…McCauley…describes the characters’ evolving relationships with wit and warmth.” AARP
“You can recognize great writers in their minor characters…Stephen McCauley belongs to an elite club of authors who create such memorable supporting roles, and in his latest, My Ex-Life , he serves up a narcissistic San Francisco real estate agent, a bitter, tourist-town shopkeeper, and an exotic next-door philanderer, to name just three.” Chronogram
“Sardonic, wry and ceaselessly funny as it may be, My Ex-Life genuinely surprises as it progresses, accumulating tenderness, warmth and complexity, and providing some latitude for modest growth and underplayed epiphanies to all its vivid characterseven the most jaded, narcissistic and rapacious.” Almanac Weekly
“His writing is an absolute delight…It’s one of those stories I love so much because it’s about the idea of who we surround ourselves with, the family we create, and all the different kinds of relationships we have in our lives and how wonderful and frustrating and heartbreaking and absurd they can be.” WAMC’s The Roundtable
“McCauley has a remarkable talent for telling a story filled with insights into human behavior and laced with plenty of humor.” Shelf Awareness
“Nothing is more satisfying, however, than what can be aptly described as a plain, old-fashioned ‘good read’, especially one as well-written as My Ex-Life from skillful storyteller and bestselling author Stephen McCauley.” Lambda Literary
“Gentle, wise…this lovely novel…shows how, with some loving help, you can reset your life.” The ARTery
“Together, this oddball group proves that a family can be a pot-smoking mom, a moody teen, and Mom’s gay ex-husband.” Brit + Co
“Captivating…McCauley [presents] wonderfully distinctive and detailed people who are smart and funny. The observational aspects of the novel are so vivid that you are likely to race through the book in a few sittings.” The Connecticut Post
“Sweet-but-unsentimental paean to altruism and friendship that gets to the heart of people, be they nice or nasty.... A tender, strikingly ‘true’ story that is warm, clear, and nuanced.” Library Journal
“Funny, heartfelt, and utterly winning...” Southern Living
“Interesting. And complicated. And hilarious.” EW.com
“Divorce is the great reuniter in Stephen McCauley’s sharp, laugh-out-loud novel.” Martha Stewart Living
“Everything you’ve heard (or read) about My Ex-Life (Flatiron, 2018), the acclaimed new novel by Stephen McCauley (of The Object of My Affection fame) is true; it’s subtly wicked funny and insightful…” Baltimore Out Loud
“Summer reads don’t get much sweeter than this novel…McCauley charmingly juggles an assortment of funny, believable characters…as each, in their different ways, find their way home.” The Seattle Times
“Reading My Ex-Life sometimes feels like a long and especially brilliant New York Times ‘Modern Love’ installment, full of modern twists and turns. But it’s more than that. It’s a provocative search for the essence of homea village, a house, a community, a co-mingling of souls with certain affinities that somehow find each other and are fortunate enough to recognize what they have.” Wicked Local
Praise for Stephen McCauley's Previous Works :
“Make no mistake: McCauley is a social satirist in the tradition of Evelyn Waugh and Oscar Wildeand like them, he's a serious writer indeed.” The Los Angeles Times on Alternatives to Sex
“Delightful...nearly perfect.” Entertainment Weekly on Alternatives to Sex
“Stephen McCauley is really the secret love child of Edith Wharton and Woody Allen.” The New York Times on The Easy Way Out
McCauley fits neatly alongside Tom Perrotta and Maria Semple in the category of "Novelists You'd Most Like to Drive Across the Country With"fine company, indeed. And if there's more lust for real estate than actual lust within these pages, that feels appropriate for this idiosyncratic couple. From the time David shows up on Julie's stoop, the reader hopes against all hope that these two might figure out a way to head out to pasture, together.
The New York Times Book Review - Sarah Dunn
06/18/2018 The wry, bittersweet seventh novel by McCauley (The Object of My Affection) transports its hero into the life that might have been his if things had turned out differently. Fifty-something David Hedges, who makes an adequate living in San Francisco coaching the children of wealthy parents through the college application process, has recently been dumped by his boyfriend, and the cheap apartment he rents is up for sale. So when Julie Fiske, to whom he was briefly married before he came to terms with being gay, asks him to join her at her sprawling, decaying house in a seaside town north of Boston to get her unmotivated daughter, Mandy, in shape for her senior year in high school, he gladly accepts. Plot isn’t McCauley’s strong point: Most readers will see every twist coming, and a subplot involving Mandy’s involvement with a local creep who drives around in a van hitting on teenaged girls has an after-school special feel. It’s the author’s confused but lovable characters, and his plentiful one-liners—like David’s recognition that he “had rarely worked with a parent who did not describe her child as ‘gifted’ ”—that provide the charm. This comedy of manners is a summery confection tinged with awareness of a coming autumn. (May)
03/15/2018 David Hedges is glumly coming to terms with his landlord selling his gorgeous San Francisco carriage house and that his younger partner Soren has left him for a wealthier, fitter man, when he gets a phone call that jolts him into action. It's Julie Fiske, the one person he holds most dear, his former wife whom he has not seen in more than 30 years. Julie needs his help, so David flies to her small town north of Boston where she's running an Airbnb in an old, cluttered Victorian. Julie's soon-to-be second ex-husband wants to sell the house, and Julie only has two months to raise enough cash to buy him out. To add to her stress, her daughter Mandy should be applying for college but seems to have taken a wrong turn. David and Julie have a loving relationship despite their bittersweet history, and they each try to figure out a way forward. A colorful cast of less-than-helpful characters add wit and social commentary. VERDICT While the ending is a little too tidy, fans of McCauley (The Object of My Affection; Insignificant Others), who have come to expect his trademark warmth will not object. [Library marketing.]—Christine Perkins, Whatcom Cty. Lib. Syst., Bellingham, WA
Narrator George Newbern eloquently embodies the voice of a man at a midlife crossroads. In McCauley’s entertaining audiobook, David and Julie reconnect years after their short marriage ended following a miscarriage and David’s discovery of being gay. Julie is now going through another divorce, and her estranged husband is planning to sell their New England home despite Julie’s reliance on the property for income as a bed-and-breakfast. David and Julie reconnect over Julie’s daughter, Mandy, who needs assistance preparing college applications. Newbern’s tone is skillfully timed for subtle humor and thoughtful wisdom. He hits just the right notes as multiple characters face major decisions in their lives. S.P.C. © AudioFile 2018, Portland, Maine
2018-01-23 When midlife woes descend, a long-divorced couple find their paths merging again.Many years ago, David Hedges and Julie Fiske had a short, sweet marriage. Then she lost a baby and he realized he was gay, and they parted ways. Now they haven't seen each other in almost 30 years. For much of that time, Julie's been married to her second husband, Henry, and raising their daughter, Mandy, in Beauport, a tourist town on the New England coast. But not only has Henry left her for another woman, he's now planning to sell their big, rambling Victorian out from under her. She needs that house: her sole means of support is her none-too-successful Airbnb. Then her surly teenage daughter goes digging in the basement and learns for the first time of her mother's earlier marriage, beginning the chain of events that leads to David and Julie's reunion. David is now a successful college admissions consultant in San Francisco, but his life has also hit a rough patch. His boyfriend has left him, he's put on weight, and it looks like he's about to be evicted from his apartment. When Julie reaches out in her hour of need, he decides to shelve his problems for a while and fly across the country to work on hers, which are quite a bit worse than she's aware of. As always, McCauley's (Insignificant Others, 2010, etc.) effervescent prose is full of wit and wisdom on every topic—college application essays, Airbnb operation, weed addiction, live porn websites, and, most of all, people. "When everything looks perfectly right about a person, there's usually something significantly wrong." "All couples start off as Romeo and Juliet and end up as Laurel and Hardy."A gin and tonic for the soul.