<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>Patrick O'Neil spends his days avoiding clients at the travel agency he works for and his nights avoiding his safe, but passionless romance with his lover Arthur. A tale of doing what you want to do as opposed to what you're supposed to do, McCauley's comedy is filled with longing and truth.<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br>Patrick O'Neil is a travel agent who never goes anywhere. His closest confidante, Sharon, is chain-smoking her way to singles hell, passing up man after man. His parents, proprietors of a suburban men's store whose fortunes are sagging more visibly than its customers, can't agree how best to interfere in their sons' lives. And his lover, Arthur (a nice golden retriever of a guy to whom Patrick can't quite commit), wants to cement their relationship by buying a house. <br> Then a call comes in the middle of another sleepless night. Tony, Patrick's straight-as-an-arrow younger brother, has fallen in love with a beautiful lawyer who is turning him on to...<i>opera.</i> Unfortunately, she's not the woman he's already pledged to marry. Tony's life is a mess. Finally, the brothers have something in common.<p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><i>Detroit News</i> It's hard to resist the lovable folks in McCauley's <i>The Easy Way Out...</i>a wonderfully odd and heartrending collection of people, these more or less lost souls trying to figure out their lives and loves...Quirky, complicated and often hilarious, Stephen McCauley's people are, in the end, just like you and me. Read <i>The Easy Way Out</i> and see just how easy it is to fall in love with them.<br><br><i>Vogue</i> Charm may be the hardest of all qualities to pin down on paper, but <i>The Easy Way Out</i> has it brimming from every page....McCauley has an impeccable ear for the language of family squabbles and a consummate understanding of the small pleasures and guilts that inform love. Right up to its bittersweet end, <i>The Easy Way Out</i> provokes numerous smiles and repeated flashes of recognition.<br><br>Michael Dorris <i>San Francisco Chronicle</i> Like <i>The Object of My Affection, The Easy Way Out</i> is an exhilarating, entertaining, smart novel. Vivid, quirky characters leap off the page....On one level, the collisions of these men and women are laugh-out-loud funny....McCauley has a marvelous knack of selecting angles of observation that reveal more about a character than the character knows about him or herself. <i>The Easy Way Out</i> is a great story, a page-turner, very contemporary, sometimes arch, always agile....Stephen McCauley is a writer of insight, surprise, and finesse. His novel sings.<br><p/><br></br><p><b> About the Author </b></p></br></br>Stephen McCauley is the author of <i>Alternatives to Sex</i>, <i>True Enough</i>, <i>The Man of the House</i>, <i>The Easy Way Out</i>, <i>My Ex-Life</i>, and <i>The Object of My Affection</i>, which was adapted into a film starring Jennifer Aniston and Paul Rudd. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts. Visit his website at StephenMcCauley.com.
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