Erik Tarloff is the author of the national bestseller Face-Time, The Man Who Wrote the Book and All Our Yesterdays. His last book, The Woman In Black, was a Los Angeles Times bestseller.Much of his early work was written for the screen, both large and small and for publications including Slate, The Atlantic, The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Financial Times, and many others. His list of credits includes almost one hundred situation comedy scripts, including multiple episodes of M*A*S*H, All in the Family, the Bob Newhart Show, the Jeffersons, Alice, Room 222, Housecalls, My World and Welcome To It, and many others. For his television writing, he has been nominated for an Emmy Award, a Writers Guild Award, and an NAACP Image Award. He currently lives in Berkeley, California with his wife, economist Laura Tyson. This is his fifth novel.
"In the art of opera, both ecstasy and misery emanate from love. We
wouldn’t have it any other way. People are like that."
—SF Chronicle"Tarloff has a knack for bristly close
encounters...plot summaries don't do justice to the ways in which
the author gracefully weaves together his intersecting story lines
as a vehicle to illustrate larger themes"
—Zyzzyva"Tarloff’s latest is packed with unexpected twists and a
haunting, funny love story for grown-ups."—Diablo Magazine"Sharp,
fast-paced, and unapologetic in its portrayal of the worlds of
artistic philanthropy and patronage, Erik Tarloff's operatic new
novel gives us the juiciest of predicaments: a protagonist who is
difficult but impossible to ignore. San Francisco, meanwhile, plays
a supporting role vividly and compellingly."—Belinda McKeon, author
of Tender“Reading Erik Tarloff’s Tell Me the Truth About Love is
like eating a box of carefully selected chocolate truffles: you
don’t want to stop.” —Wendy Lesser, author of Music for
Silenced Voices“All the complications of love are here, neatly
plotted against a background of arts intrigue. The
characterization is clever yet rich in sympathy, even for those who
stand in love’s way. This is among the best of Tarloff’s novels –
funny, smart, and full of unexpected twists.”—Zachary Leader,
author of The Life of Saul Bellow "In Tell Me the Truth About
Love, Erik Tarloff displays his unique and uncanny ability to make
any culture accessible and universal. A true master of dialogue, he
doesn’t just ‘tell’ you a story. He makes you a character
within. This book literally begs for a sequel."—Carter
Monroe, author of Waffle House Blues “The characters are real,
the tensions and the beguiling undercurrents of sensuality are
beautifully handled. An elegant, haunting love story for
grown ups.”—Martin Walker, author of the Bruno, Chief of Police
novels "Tell Me the Truth About Love is a literary beach
read. It combines vivid characters, plot twists and plenty of sex,
with the elegant dialogue, psychological insight, and sophisticated
comedy we've come to expect from Erik Tarloff.”—George
Stephanopoulos, ABC News“Give someone Tell Me the Truth About
Love...and the lucky person will disappear on you until it’s
finished…It’s hard to decide whether the repartee is the best
you’ve ever heard or the sex is the best you’ve never had…Tarloff,
who told us all he knew about power in Washington left it for San
Francisco to tell us all he knows about love.”
—Margaret Carlson“[Tarloff’s] books combine hold-your-attention
plotting, with elegant and droll dialogue and description, with
insider awareness of their respective settings. This one is set in
the arts world of San Francisco…Among other things, it is a
comedy-of-manners about the world of philanthropy, and the endless
dance between the people who must ask for money and those who
decide whether to give…From Evelyn Waugh onward, the Brits have
been world champions in mercilessly hilarious depictions of this
sort of relations-among-unequals. Erik has a Brit-worthy touch. The
book is also about gender politics of all sorts, about parents and
children, about love and loss."—James Fallows
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