John Gregory Dunne wrote five other novels–Vegas; True Confessions; Dutch Shea, Jr.; The Red White and Blue; and Playland–and seven works of nonfiction , among which are the memoir-like Harp and two books that look at Hollywood, The Studio and Monster. Born in West Hartford, Connecticut, in 1932, he graduated from Princeton in 1954. He collaborated with his wife, the writer Joan Didion, on many screenplays, including Panic in Needle Park and True Confessions. John Gregory Dunne died in December 2003.
“Gripping. . . . Dunne . . . us[es] his virtuosic skills as a
social observer, his ear for street talk and his gut instinct for a
story to create his most compelling novel since True Confessions.”
— The New York Times
“Sure-handed, ambitious, panoramic, and pungent . . . Nothing Lost
is the real thing. It speaks to the American here and now more
vividly and astutely than anything since Tom Wolfe’s The Bonfire of
the Vanities. “ — The Washington Post Book World
“Nothing Lost harnesses a number of dark engines of power, greed,
and manipulation, all of which connect in a knockout trip through
our media-saturated society. . . . Sensational satire.” --Time Out
New York
“A wide-ranging, shrewd and bittersweet story that will stand with
the best of Dunne’s work . . . terrific . . . a serious novel
disguised as brilliantly entertaining popular fiction.”
--Seattle Times
“Pitch perfect.” –The New York Times Book Review
“Astonishingly wicked and deliriously well-paced. . . . Genuinely
well-plotted, full of surprises, without skimping on emotional and
metaphorical resonance.” –The Baltimore Sun
“Reads like a John Grisham story as rewritten by Carl Hiaasen. . .
. Dunne brings his characters alive, even the outrageous ones. And
he’ll leave you with a bittersweet feeling that may haunt you for a
day or two. It’s that good a book.” – St. Louis Post-Dispatch
“[This] novel is fertilized with blood. And with stinging cynicism,
political hypocrisy, betrayal, and, if you can imagine, worse. . .
. Nothing lost by spending a few days with this splendidly dark
entertainment.” –Chicago Tribune
“[A] deliciously cynical page-turner.” –W Magazine
“Sardonic, bemused and, beneath thickets of thorns, wistful. . . .
Imagine F. Scott Fitzgerald and John O’Hara sitting elbow to elbow
in the same bar arguing over the latest tabloid scandal and you
have some idea of how Nothing Lost flows through your inner ear.”
–Newsday
“Dunne effectively skewers shibboleths of both left and right while
vividly delineating the hidden links between America’s elite and
its forgotten underclass.” –Entertainment Weekly
“Brutally cynical, often funny, and frequently profane.” –Detroit
Free Press
“A violent, sexually charged, and, at times, acidly funny tale of
power and paranoia in contemporary America.”–Library Journal
(starred)
“Nothing Lost is often very funny, in ways that keep reminding us
that other people’s failings aren’t wholly unlike some of our own.”
–The New York Review of Books
“This novel may well be [Dunne’s] best . . . . His use of language.
. . has been raised to a white-hot level . . . . Reading it is an
experience likely to stay with you for a long time.” –Newark
Star-Ledger
“America was [Dunne’s] great subject, and he pursued it, depicting
it, trying to contain it, allowing himself to be dazzled (but never
surprised) by its malicious heart. He reveled in chicanery and
folly; it gave him his voice. John Gregory Dunne was our great
connoisseur of venality.” –Los Angeles Times Book Review
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