Praise for Ballad of the Black and Blue Mind "In
Ballad of the Black and Blue Mind, Anne Roiphe has given us an up-close portrait of an insular and rarely glimpsed world, serving up a memorable cast of characters with uncommon verve and wisdom. This is as engaging and moving a novel as I've read in a long time."--
Daphne Merkin, author of
The Fame Lunches "In laying bare some tribal mores of life and work in a tight-knit psychoanalytic community, Anne Roiphe soon comes upon her real subject, the thwarted love between parents and children, caught between hope and disappointment, a prey to neglect, misunderstanding, and helpless apprehension. Her writing is alive with unsparing insight and keen feeling."--
Morris Dickstein, author of
Gates of Eden and
Dancing in the Dark Praise for Art and Madness "To capture the spirit of those prefeminist days Ms. Roiphe ... must write intelligently about a time when, at least in matters of love, sex, marriage, motherhood, career and literary hero worship, she was not very smart at all. Art and Madness accomplishes all this ... Ms. Roiphe is sharply perceptive about the flesh-and-blood people around her. And she is witty about the ones who live in her imagination."--
The New York Times "Roiphe's sharp, dazzling memoir of her literary youth in late 1950s and early 1960s New York City contains a dark story of untenable marriages, alcoholism, and outrageous sexism ... She is a masterly writer: her work presents vivid, priceless snapshots of the roiling era of Communist hysteria, faddish homosexuality, male privilege, and the heartbreaking fragility of talented men and their dreams of fame."--
Publishers Weekly Praise for Fruitful: A Real Mother "Her riff on motherhood is passionate, lyrical, witty, insightful, commonsensical and off the wall. It will evoke shudders of recognition from anyone who has cared for a child.--
Emily MacFarquhar, The New York Times Book Review
Praise for 1185 Park Avenue "Eloquent....Roiphe gives her memoir the dramatic vividness of a novel."--
Karen Lehrman,
The New York Times Book Review "Probing....Roiphe's [book] is an acute social history as well as a personal account."
--Robert Taylor,
The Boston Globe "A marvelous, fascinating book....A horror story and a love story at the same time."
--Peter Gay, author of
The Bourgeois Experience
In the rarefied world of New York City psychoanalysts and their patients, Dr. Estelle Berman belongs to a dying breed. A distinguished analyst who lives and practices on the Upper West Side, she inspires devotion among her patients. But she has started falling asleep during meetings and forgetting her patients' names. Her colleagues Dr. H. and Dr. Z. observe her mental decline with the objectivity of a Greek chorus, but when it comes to the disappointments in their own lives they are far less detached. And then there are the patients themselves: Justine, a movie star with a penchant for stealing things; Edith, who writes poems in secret and eats to subdue feelings of panic; Anna, a self-harming college student whose depression baffles her parents; and Mike Wilson, a widower whose disgraced son has fled the country. Ballad of the Black and Blue Mind is a novel of psychological realities, teeming humanity, and glorious contradictions.