Jack
Engelhard’s The Days of the Bitter End
may well be the definitive word on the 1960s. This is a landmark book,
masterfully evocative. Engelhard once again proves himself to be a truly great
novelist in this beautifully crafted historical novel that recaptures an era
that has left an indelible mark on our culture to this day. Read it and laugh, read it and weep, because
it’s all here, the way it was back then, the age of innocence soon to be
shattered, but then reborn. This is what it was like to be young, every moment
an adventure. Brilliant.
Praise Received for The Days of the Bitter End
“It’s all
here…masterfully written by one of the greatest novelists of our Age. Engelhard
brings to bear his journalistic talents as well as matchless storytelling
ability to put the reader right in the center of the action…of the story…of the
times.”
- John W.
Cassell, author of Crossroads: 1969
“What a
great story. If you missed the 60s – if you missed the excitement, the passion,
the radicalism, the thrills, the hopes and dreams – this book brings it all
alive. I could not put it down.”
- Kmgroup review
“Another
significant accomplishment from this versatile writer, and it resonates with
the sort of dialogue and imagery that not only rings with credibility, but
instantly evokes a ‘you are there’ feeling for the reader.”
- Nancy Sundstrom, Northern
Express
“Engelhard’s writing is superb, and he
offers up a slice of 1960s life that is vibrant and moving. The story is
skillfully crafted, quite witty and intriguing.”
- Carie Morrison, Rambles.net
About the Author
Contemporaries have hailed novelist Jack Engelhard as
“the last Hemingway” and of being “a writer without peer and the conscience of
us all.” The New York Times commended
the economy of his prose… “precise, almost clinical language.” His bestselling
novel Indecent Proposal made him
internationally famous as the foremost chronicler of moral dilemmas and of
topics dealing with temptation. Works that followed won him an even greater
following, such as Escape From Mount
Moriah, his book of memoirs that won awards for writing and for film. His latest novel Compulsive draws us into the mind of
a compulsive gambler in a work stunningly brilliant and original, and
seductively readable. Engelhard writes a weekly column for The Washington Times.