Split-Level: A Novel
By (Author) Sande Boritz Berger
She Writes Press
She Writes Press
20th June 2019
United States
General
Fiction
Paperback
320
Width 139mm, Height 215mm
Approximately 50 percent of all married couples in the United States divorce; the U.S. has the fourth highest percentage of divorced couples in the world.
The average length of a marriage that ends in divorce is eight years.
The average age of couples going through a divorce is thirty years old.
Lifetime will be airing a new show in 2018 called The Seven Year Switch. In it, four couples evaluate the pros and cons of switching partners.
The mid-1970s and Watergate cast a shadow of scandal and mistrust throughout the nation that made people cynical and affected families and friends (Washington Post). In many ways, there is a repeat of these issues today as reflected in the media.
Womens fiction comprises at least 40 percent of adult popular fiction sold in the United States and approximately 60 percent of adult popular fiction paperbacks. (American Bookseller Association and Book Industry Study Group).
AUDIENCE:
Women of all ages, from young housewives to working women to older women who may have lived the 1970s culture
Women in book clubs and book groups
Women and men who went through a divorce when they were young
Men interested in the changing mores of society
Those people interested in the era of the 1970s and how that decade changed families, marriage, and sex and influenced art, music, and our American culture
Anyone who has considered trying an open marriage
2019 Readers' Favorite Awards Finalist in Fiction (Women's)
How impressive Split-Level is: wonderfully rich with details, fluent and fluid, with an inevitable-yet-unexpected ending, inspired throughout is its portrait of a woman whose essential life is an unconscious double-ness/split-ness.
Joyce Carol Oates, author of We Were the Mulvaneys and Blonde
Ah, the 1970s. Miniskirts. Suburbia. Tie-dye and the freewheeling era of the so-called open marriage. Boritz Bergers sly, smart second novel, written in prose as glorious as the eras iconic tequila sunrise, gives us an on-the-verge-of-an-adventure heroine who comes to realize that sometimes having the life you desperately need means giving up the life you desperately want.
Caroline Leavitt, New York Times best-selling author of Pictures of You and Is This Tomorrow
Berger excels at showing her characters to be people who were raised in old-fashioned homes who are now confronting unconventional, risky life choicesand dealing with the stresses and absurdities that follow their decisions. A smart, nuanced novel about open marriage . . .
Kirkus Reviews
Sande Boritz Berger sets a 1970s Jersey housewife on a provocative collision course in Split-Level, a sharp portrait of female empowerment. Through sensitive insights, a woman finds an honest version of herself after realizing that her ideas on the nuclear family have made her erase vital parts of her identity.
Foreword Reviews (five-star review)
With humor and poignancy, Berger brings us to the depths of how frightening it is to lose all trust in those we love, and the uncertainty that all we thought we had might slide away.
Nahid Rachlin, author of Persian Girls and Foreigner
In her latest novel, Split-Level, Sande Boritz Berger paints a vivid picture of the early 1970s, a time when the sexual revolution was making its way through the suburbs of America. With equal parts humor and heart, Berger explores the anguish of a marriage coming apart and how some go to any lengths to mend it.
Laurie Gelman, author of Class Mom
Split-Level is a gripping, fast-paced story, perfect for readers of literary fiction who enjoy a mature, nuanced look at the complications of marital relationships.
Betty Hafner, author of Not Exactly Love: A Memoir
A page-turning journey through 1970s suburbia.
Elizabeth McCourt, author of Sin in the Big Easy
In Split-Level, Berger, a keen observer of suburban angst, takes us back to the early days of the sexual revolution in the burbsto the promise and reality of bed-hopping and marital blissas it plays out in the lives of Alex and Donny Pearl and those of a neighboring couple whose marriage is in a parallel state of decline. Hard to put down; hard to forget.
Barbara Donsky, author of award-winning Veronicas Grave: A Daughters Memoir and the international bestseller Missing Mother
A poignant look back on suburban post-war haze during the swinging 70s, Berger has written a smart and unpredictably funny novel. Her protagonist, Alex, grappling with marriage, two small children, and the conflicting social mores of that time, is sure to win over your heart.
Susan Tepper, author of Monte Carlo Days & Nights and The Merrill Diaries
For as long as she can remember, libraries have been Sande Boritz Bergers safe haven and books her greatest joy. After two decades as a scriptwriter and video producer for Fortune 500 companies, Sande returned to her other passion: writing fiction and nonfiction full-time. She completed an MFA in writing and literature at Stony Brook Southampton College, where she was awarded the Deborah Hecht Memorial prize for fiction. Her short stories have appeared in Epiphany, Tri-Quarterly, Confrontation, and The Southampton Review, as well as several anthologies, including Aunties: Thirty-Five Writers Celebrate Their Other Mother (Ballantine) and Ophelias Mom: Women Speak Out About Loving and Letting Go of Their Adolescent Daughters (Crown). She has written for the Huffington Post, Salon, and Psychology Today. Her debut novel, The Sweetness, was a Foreword Reviews IndieFab finalist for Book of the Year and was nominated for the Sophie Brody award from the ALA. Berger and her husband live in NYC and often escape to the quiet of Bridgehampton