The War of the Roses
Warren Adler
Published: 2004
Pages: 278
This is the novel that inspired one of the most famous movies about divorce ever made, starring Michael Douglas and Kathleen Turner. Oliver and Barbara Rose are a passionate couple who meet at a Cape Cod auction while bidding for matching figurines. The figurines belong together, and so do the Roses. Their perfect love, complete with dream home and wonderful children, is fated to disintegrate, however, and when Oliver collapses in an apparent heart attack, Barbara's indifference brings the true state of their marriage out into the open. The war they wage against each other eventually descends into brutality and madness, as they destroy each other's most prized possessions and spiral into chaos.
The global impact of both the book and the movie has brought the phrase The War of the Roses into the popular jargon describing the terrible hatred and cruelty engendered in divorce proceedings.
The Roses' bereft children are featured in the novel's sequel, The Children of the Roses.
Warren Adler writes with skill and a sense of scene.--New York Times Book Review
Warren Adler surveys the terrain [of marital strife] with mordant wit. This accomplished tale...builds to a baleful yet all-too-believable climax.--Cosmopolitan
The War of the Roses is a clever look at the breakup of a marriage....It is Adler's achievement that he makes the most bizarre actions of each (party) seem logical under the circumstances....Both frightening and revealing.--Washington Star
The global impact of both the book and the movie has brought the phrase The War of the Roses into the popular jargon describing the terrible hatred and cruelty engendered in divorce proceedings.
The Roses' bereft children are featured in the novel's sequel, The Children of the Roses.
Warren Adler writes with skill and a sense of scene.--New York Times Book Review
Warren Adler surveys the terrain [of marital strife] with mordant wit. This accomplished tale...builds to a baleful yet all-too-believable climax.--Cosmopolitan
The War of the Roses is a clever look at the breakup of a marriage....It is Adler's achievement that he makes the most bizarre actions of each (party) seem logical under the circumstances....Both frightening and revealing.--Washington Star