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Rules of Civility

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    ¡°An irresistible and astonishingly assured debut about working class-women and world-weary WASPs in 1930s New York¡¦in the crisp, noirish prose of the era, Towles portrays complex relationships in a city that is at once melting pot and elitist enclave ? and a thoroughly modern heroine who fearlessly claims her place in it.¡± -O, the Oprah Magazine

    ¡°With this snappy period piece, Towles resurrects the cinematic black-and-white Manhattan of the golden age¡¦[his] characters are youthful Americans in tricky times, trying to create authentic lives.¡± -The New York Times Book Review

    ¡°This very good first novel about striving and surviving in Depression-era Manhattan deserves attention¡¦The great strength of Rules of Civility is in the sharp, sure-handed evocation of Manhattan in the late ¡®30s.¡± -Wall Street Journal

    ¡°Put on some Billie Holiday, pour a dry martini and immerse yourself in the eventful life of Katey Kontent¡¦[Towles] clearly knows the privileged world he¡¯s writing about, as well as the vivid, sometimes reckless characters who inhabit it.¡± -People

    ¡°[A] wonderful debut novel¡¦Towles [plays] with some of the great themes of love and class, luck and fated encounters that animated Wharton¡¯s novels.¡± -The Chicago Tribune

    ¡°Glittering¡¦filled with snappy dialogue, sharp observations and an array of terrifically drawn characters¡¦Towles writes with grace and verve about the mores and manners of a society on the cusp of radical change.¡± -NPR.org

    ¡°Glamorous Gotham in one to relish¡¦a book that enchants on first reading and only improves on the second.¡± -The Philadelphia Inquirer

    Ã¥¼Ò°³

    From the New York Times-bestselling author of A Gentleman in Moscow, a ¡°sharply stylish¡± (Boston Globe) novel of a young woman in post-Depression era New York who suddenly finds herself thrust into high society-now with over one million readers worldwide

    A sophisticated and entertaining debut novel about an irresistible young woman with an uncommon sense of purpose.

    Set in New York City in 1938, Rules of Civility tells the story of a watershed year in the life of an uncompromising twenty-five-year- old named Katey Kontent. Armed with little more than a formidable intellect, a bracing wit, and her own brand of cool nerve, Katey embarks on a journey from a Wall Street secretarial pool through the upper echelons of New York society in search of a brighter future.

    The story opens on New Year's Eve in a Greenwich Village jazz bar, where Katey and her boardinghouse roommate Eve happen to meet Tinker Grey, a handsome banker with royal blue eyes and a ready smile. This chance encounter and its startling consequences cast Katey off her current course, but end up providing her unexpected access to the rarified offices of Conde Nast and a glittering new social circle. Befriended in turn by a shy, principled multimillionaire, an Upper East Side ne'er-do-well, and a single-minded widow who is ahead of her times, Katey has the chance to experience first hand the poise secured by wealth and station, but also the aspirations, envy, disloyalty, and desires that reside just below the surface. Even as she waits for circumstances to bring Tinker back into her orbit, she will learn how individual choices become the means by which life crystallizes loss.

    Elegant and captivating, Rules of Civility turns a Jamesian eye on how spur of the moment decisions define life for decades to come. A love letter to a great American city at the end of the Depression, readers will quickly fall under its spell of crisp writing, sparkling atmosphere and breathtaking revelations, as Towles evokes the ghosts of Fitzgerald, Capote, and McCarthy.

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