We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

Paperback / ISBN-13: 9781860495472

Price: £10.99

Disclosure: If you buy products using the retailer buttons above, we may earn a commission from the retailers you visit.

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

Oates is one of the finest and most devastating living writers . . . this novel [is] extraordinary . . . a darkly comic monologue of panic and desperation, which, thankfully, allows you back up once it's dragged you down
Julie Myerson, Mail on Sunday
Hypnotic and powerful. Man Crazy will take you on a dark and wild ride
Washington Post
The bizarre twists and turns of Ingrid's life take on a hallucinatory intensity ... the one constant of the gripping story - the emotional deprivation that has scarred Ingrid for life - comes through with a fierce burning clarity
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Her writing is sinister, gothic and full of atmosphere . . . one of America's most original and disturbing voices
SUNDAY TIMES
Flawlessly written and haunting . . . Man Crazy demonstrates a distinctly American faith in the tenacious human spirit
Chicago Tribune
Her writing is sinister, gothic and full of atmosphere ... one of America's most original and disturbing voices
SUNDAY TIMES
Oates is one of the finest and most devastating living writers ... this novel [is] extraordinary ... a darkly comic monologue of panic and desperation, which, thankfully, allows you back up once it's dragged you down
JULIE MYERSON, MAIL ON SUNDAY
The bizarre twists and turns of Ingrid's life take on a hallucinatory intensity . . . the one constant of the gripping story - the emotional deprivation that has scarred Ingrid for life - comes through with a fierce burning clarity
Publishers Weekly
Oates shows us the paradoxical resilience that sustains people who endure more than we can imagine, and somehow hang on. Her boldly drawn grotesques reach out to us, making us believe in them and care about their fates
Kirkus Reviews
Unlike anything Joyce Carol Oates has written before
Atlanta Journal