Slow Days, Fast Company: The World, The Flesh, and L.A. [Paperback]

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  • Category: Books (Fiction)
  • Author:  Babitz, Eve
  • Author:  Babitz, Eve
  • ISBN-10:  1681370085
  • ISBN-10:  1681370085
  • ISBN-13:  9781681370088
  • ISBN-13:  9781681370088
  • Publisher:  NYRB Classics
  • Publisher:  NYRB Classics
  • Pages:  184
  • Pages:  184
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Binding:  Paperback
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2016
  • Pub Date:  01-May-2016
  • SKU:  1681370085-11-SPLV
  • SKU:  1681370085-11-SPLV
  • Item ID: 100537317
  • List Price: $16.95
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No one burned hotter than Eve Babitz. Possessing skin that radiated “its own kind of moral laws,” spectacular teeth, and a figure that was the stuff of legend, she seduced seemingly everyone who was anyone in Los Angeles for a long stretch of the 1960s and ’70s. One man proved elusive, however, and so Babitz did what she did best, she wrote him a book.Slow Days, Fast Companyis a full-fledged and full-bodied evocation of a bygone Southern California that far exceeds its mash-note premise. In ten sun-baked, Santa Ana wind–swept sketches, Babitz re-creates a Los Angeles of movie stars distraught over their success, socialites on three-day drug binges holed up in the Chateau Marmont, soap-opera actors worried that tomorrow’s script will kill them off, Italian femmes fatales even more fatal than Babitz. And she even leaves LA now and then, spending an afternoon at the house of flawless Orange County suburbanites, a day among the grape pickers of the Central Valley, a weekend in Palm Springs where her dreams of romance fizzle and her only solace is Virginia Woolf. In the end it doesn’t matter if Babitz ever gets the guy—she seduces us.“Los Angeles-born glamour girl, bohemian, artist, muse, sensualist, wit and pioneering foodie Eve Babitz...reads like Nora Ephron by way of Joan Didion, albeit with more lust and drugs and tequila...Reading Babitz is like being out on the warm open road at sundown, with what she called, in another book, '4/60 air conditioning' — that is, going 60 miles per hour with all four windows down. You can feel the wind in your hair.” —Dwight Garner, The New York Times

“Her writing took multiple forms. . . . But in the center was always Babitz and her sensibility—fun and hot and smart, a Henry James–loving party girl.”  —Naomi Fry,New Republic

“Babitz takes to the page lightly, slipping sharp observatlóå

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