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Boyfriend from Hell » (Reprint)

Book cover image of Boyfriend from Hell by Avery Corman

Authors: Avery Corman
ISBN-13: 9780312349783, ISBN-10: 0312349785
Format: Paperback
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Date Published: July 2007
Edition: Reprint

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Author Biography: Avery Corman

AVERY CORMAN is the author of Kramer vs. Kramer, the novel that became the basis for the Academy Award-winning motion picture. His other novels include The Old Neighborhood, 50, Prized Possessions, Oh, God!, and A Perfect Divorce. He lives in New York City.

Book Synopsis

Avery Corman blends the spirit of "Sex and the City" with the terror of "Rosemary's Baby" in this romantic psychological thriller. A highly praised observer of contemporary life and author of Kramer vs. Kramer and A Perfect Divorce, Corman zeroes in on single life, modern stress, and religious faith in The Boyfriend From Hell.

Veronica Delaney, single, in her twenties, a freelance writer, while working on an article becomes involved with a dazzling, charismatic man, and she is turned inside out. With his unique storytelling gifts, Avery Corman creates a wonderful, identifiable female character whose circumstance parallels that of so many women... and then it begins to turn. Is this boyfriend a typically uncommitted male or is he hiding something? Is he wonderfully supportive or is he excessively manipulative? Is he dramatically high-maintenance or is he inherently evil? From this insightful novelist, here is a spellbinding tale that is true-to-life, deeply involving, and ultimately, terrifying.

Kirkus Reviews

As the title declares, Corman's eighth novel (A Perfect Divorce, 2004, etc.) centers on a young New Yorker's rocky relationship with her new boyfriend, who is either a jerk or Evil Incarnate. At 24, Ronnie is already a successful freelance journalist, but her social life is in the doldrums. While researching an article on a satanic church in the city, she interviews Richard Smith, a historian who studies satanic worship. When she asks his opinion of Satanism, he offers only a vague view that since good exists, so might evil, but Richard is strikingly handsome and Ronnie is soon swept away by his debonair charms and sexual magnetism. After her article on the satanic church comes out, Ronnie receives a dead black cat and assumes the church's cultish leader, Randall Cummings, sent it as a threat. Meanwhile, Richard, who travels frequently for his work, sees Ronnie whenever he is in town, but her friends sense there is something off about him. Then Richard's editor offers Ronnie a book deal to write about satanic possession. While working on the book, Ronnie begins to have the disquieting experience of enhanced powers, winning a race and drawing an elaborate sketch while blacked out. After receiving a picture of a decapitated head, Ronnie goes to confront Randall Cummings. Again, she blacks out. Randall turns up dead, and she's a suspect. She begins to see Satan's face, first in dreams but then on the street. After interviewing a mental patient whose satanic lover looked a lot like Richard, she comes to believe she may be possessed. A lapsed Catholic, she turns to her childhood priest in the Bronx, who holds an exorcism. Ronnie is saved/cured, but the last we see of Richard, he is talking onhis cell phone and smiling enigmatically. After a few fun/creepy first chapters, the manipulated plot seems forced, obvious and lacking in suspense.

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