Elaine Dundy (1921–2008) grew up in New York City and Long Island. After graduating from Sweet Briar College in 1943 she worked as an actress in Paris and, later, London, where she met her future husband, the theater critic Kenneth Tynan. Dundy wrote three novels, The Dud Avocado (1958), The Old Man and Me (1964), and The Injured Party (1974); a play, My Place (produced in 1962); biographies of Elvis Presley and the actor Peter Finch; a study of Ferriday, Louisiana; and a memoir, Life Itself!
"In this, in a way a sequel to her classic The Dud Avocado, Elaine
Dundy's young and sexy American heroine, named (excellently) Honey
Flood this time, parks herself in London, hellbent on sleeping and
conniving and boozing her way to the top. She's angry, ambitious,
vixenish, Holly Golightly crossed with Kingsley Amis' Lucky
Jim...I'm not sure who's claiming to have invented chick lit these
days; but maybe Dundy should raise an arm, except that she's so
murderously fierce." --Los Angeles Times “Here was no one else
quite like her. She introduced a whole style, the freed American
girl landing on old Europe, starting in Paris and moving on to
London. She collected a lot of very interesting friends...She had a
lot of reality that was far more interesting than fiction.” –Gore
Vidal
Through it all, Miss Dundy’s prose glitters like confetti against
the gray English sky.
— Newsweek
As full of wry charm as The Dud Avocado.
— Doris Lessing
“It’s a terrific job—fierce, gamey, vixenish . . . as if it
was bled not written. . . . Definitely demonic, exquisitely carved,
deadly murderous comedy.”—Dawn Powell, The Washington
Post “The surprises here are delicious...Brilliant,
weirdly original, hilarious.” –Irwin Shaw “This story of an
Anglo-American liaison dangereuse is both truly horrible and
horribly funny.” –Christopher Isherwod “As full of wry charm
as The Dud Avocado.” –Doris Lessing “The Old Man and Me is a
witty black comedy of manners as seen through the eyes of Dundy’s
finest creation, a hipster Daisy Miller, who shows us how each girl
kills the thing she love-hates, or very nearly. A splendid,
destructive work.” —Gore Vidal “The Old Man and Me again finds
an American woman, Honey Flood, in Europe–this time London–amid a
tangle of relationships which have brought about her murderous
intent. It is a glimpse of a vanished world, a city which did not
require a fortune if one were to carouse, an suffer, in its more
pleasant quarters.” –Times (London)
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