Books >
Insignificant Others

Insignificant Others
A Novel  
This edition: Hardcover, 256 pages
Availability: Usually ships within 2-3 days
Our Price: $25.00
Also available in

Description


What do you do when you discover your spouse has an insignificant other?

How about when you realize your own insignificant other is becoming more significant than your spouse?

There are no easy answers to these questions, but Stephen McCauley—"the master of the modern comedy of manners" (USA Today)—makes exploring them a literary delight.

Richard Rossi works in HR at a touchy-feely software company and prides himself on his understanding of the foibles and fictions we all use to get through the day. Too bad he's not as good at spotting such behavior in himself.

What else could explain his passionate affair with Benjamin, a very unavailable married man? Richard suggests birthday presents for Benjamin's wife and vacation plans for his kids, meets him for "lunch" at a sublet apartment, and would never think about calling him after business hours.

"In the three years I'd known Benjamin, I'd come to think of him as my husband. He was, after all, a husband, and I saw it as my responsibility to protect his marriage from a barrage of outside threats and bad influences. It was the only way I could justify sleeping with him."

Since Richard is not entirely available himself—there's Conrad, his adorable if maddening partner to contend with—it all seems perfect. But when cosmopolitan Conrad starts spending a suspicious amount of time in Ohio, and economic uncertainty challenges Richard's chances for promotion, he realizes his priorities might be a little skewed.

With a cast of sharply drawn friends, frenemies, colleagues, and personal trainers, Insignificant Others is classic McCauley—a hilarious and ultimately haunting social satire about life in the United States at the bitter end of the boom years, when clinging to significant people and pursuits has never been more important—if only one could figure out what they are.
Related multimediaclose x

Video

1 to 1 of 1
  • 1635265513_89781035001_th-89773710001
    1. How significant are INSIGNIFICANT OTHERS? Stephen McCaule...
    02:59
    89770971001
See more multimedia
"A master of the comic novel, Stephen McCauley makes someone else's difficult, complicated relationship so witty, sexy and delightfully engrossing that you'll forget about your own difficult, complicated relationship. Unsentimental but moving, Insignificant Others is the story of two men trying to solve the world's oldest math problem: Does one plus one equal a couple, or just two?"
—Bob Smith, author of Selfish and Perverse and Openly Bob
"Insignificant Others is vintage McCauley, offering up the usual mixture of hilarity, pathos, irony, and regret. You'll root for Richard Rossi, the self deprecating and cannily observant HR functionary at Connectrix as he connects (or not) with co-workers and calibrates degrees of significance (or non) between lovers. It's The Office meets Jane Austen, with a twist. I adored this novel."
—Mameve Medwed, author of Mail and How Elizabeth Barrett Browning Saved My Life
"Alternatives to Sex is a bravura performance, chockablock with well-chosen words, sweeping psychological insights no truer than they should be, and characters who just might fulfill their desires for lodging and love."
—Washington Post
"Funny and affecting...[Alternatives to Sex] offers a series of lively and trenchant character portraits and a shrewd appealing commentary on contemporary manners and morals." 
People (Critics Choice) 
"[McCauley's] characters are complex and charismatic, his dialogue is winning, and consistently he plumbs the intersection of love and desire—always with brio and good cheer. He is reminiscent in that regard of Elinor Lipman and Nick Hornby." 
The Boston Globe 
"Stephen McCauley is a social satirist in the tradition of Evelyn Waugh and Oscar Wilde…with fierce, occasionally lacerating wit and a commendable willingness to dally in ambivalence and moral ambiguity."
Los Angeles Times
"Like the Victorian novels admired by McCauley's narrator, Insignificant Others is fuelled by curiosity about the way we live now—our deceptions and self-deceptions, our great yearnings and small vanities, our many excruciating social miscues and misfires. It is an incisive, rueful, humane, very smart, and very funny book."
—Joan Wickersham, author of The Suicide Index
"Reading Insignificant Others is like being a guest at the best kind of dinner party—every morsel is delicious, every guest is fascinating, and best of all you are in the company of the utterly irresistible Richard, who has strong opinions and deep insights about almost everyone, except perhaps himself. Even as I devoured this book I was deeply sorry to reach the end. Happily, I can go right back to read it again and again."
—Margot Livesey, author of Eva Moves the Furniture and The House on Fortune Street