Author:Armistead Maupin

The third novel in the beloved Tales of the City series, Armistead Maupin’s best-selling San Francisco saga.
‘An enormously talented writer… By writing about what's seemingly different Armistead Maupin always manages to capture what's so hilariously painfully true for all of us’ Amy Tan
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The calamity-prone residents of 28 Barbary Lane are at it again in this deliciously dark novel of romance and betrayal. While Anna Madrigal imprisons an anchor-woman in her basement, Michael Tolliver looks for love at the National Gay Rodeo, DeDe Halcyon Day and Mary Ann Singleton track a charismatic psychopath across Alaska, and society columnist Prue Giroux loses her heart to a derelict living in a San Francisco park.
Hurdling barriers both social and sexual, Maupin leads the eccentric tenants of Barbary Lane through heartbreak and triumph, through nail-biting terrors and gleeful coincidences in 1970s San Francisco. The result is a glittering and addictive comedy of manners that continues to beguile new generations of readers.
It's marvellous - clever, funny and brilliantly well observed
—— India KnightThe season's first beach read, a delicious romp of a debut featuring family crises galore
—— New York TimesA delicious new Gilded Age family drama . . . a guilty pleasure that also feels like a sociological text
—— VogueA joy to read . . . Pineapple Street is a gift of a novel
—— iNewsJenny Jackson turns this story of super-rich people living frustrated lives in Brooklyn into a compelling and thoughtful look at what it means to have very little agency in your own life. While it's hard to feel too much sympathy for the main characters, it's an excellent read
—— StylistA lovely, absorbing, acutely observed novel about class, money and love. These are the themes of Henry James and Jane Austen, but they are observed with a fresh eye and a contemporary voice.
—— Nick HornbySmart and clever, minutely observed and packed with one-liners, Pineapple Street is a more complicated read than it looks
—— The GuardianPineapple Street is a portrait at once searing, hilarious and poignant of a NY family straight-jacketed by their own wealth
—— Miranda Cowley HellerI stayed up until five in the morning devouring PINEAPPLE STREET. Nothing beats a story told this well and rendered with such lovingly comic precision . . . Truly the smartest and most deliciously fun novel I've read in ages
—— Kevin KwanBooks about complicated American blue blood families are my literary catnip so I loved this novel about a woman marrying into a wealthy New York clan and the struggles she faces to fit in. It's a smart, entertaining exploration of class and money and the expectations that come with both
—— Good HousekeepingI loved PINEAPPLE STREET. The characters are complex and engaging and their stories bring a particular slice of New York magically alive. So wise, emotionally honest, and such fun
—— Helen FieldingA blissfully enjoyable novel. One to pack for the summer, whether you're headed for the Hamptons or the Norfolk Broads
—— India Knight , Sunday TimesJenny Jackson delivers SUCH a delicious treat with her debut novel, PINEAPPLE STREET. It delights across the board - character (the wealthy, quirky Stockton family), setting (an insider's look at Brooklyn) and plot (a searingly honest exploration of class and privilege.) With shifting points of view and smart, laugh-out-loud observations on every single page, PINEAPPLE STREET is an instant classic
—— Elin HilderbrandFilled with warmth and light. I was moved, engaged, inspired and charmed
—— Daisy BuchananPineapple Street is that rarest of gifts-a novel you don't want to put down for anything. Transporting and laugh-out-loud funny, this intergenerational story is a perfect tale for our times
—— J. Courtney Sullivan, New York Times bestselling author of FRIENDS AND STRANGERSIn this vibrant and hilarious debut, Jenny Jackson has taken a familiar tale-siblings, family money, competing interests-and given it fresh life. What binds the book together so wonderfully is Jackson's keen understanding of the beauty and difficulty of belonging, of how our desires can clash with our inherited narrative and what happens to the people we love when we need to rewrite the story. Pineapple Street is riveting, timely, hugely entertaining and brimming with truth
—— Cynthia D’Aprix Sweeney, New York Times bestselling author of THE NEST and GOOD COMPANYFull of witty and caustic observations about a privileged class of New Yorkers, PINEAPPLE STREET is a sharp and juicy satire
—— Nita Prose, #1 New York Times bestselling author of THE MAIDKiller debut about class, love and money
—— GraziaIt's the novel Jane Austen would have written . . . if Jane Austen lived in Brooklyn Heights in the 21st century
—— New York TimesIf you're in search of the fiction trifecta - a captivating story that's masterfully constructed, vividly peopled, and crisply written - look no further. Jenny Jackson's Pineapple Street is pure reading pleasure, hilarious, big-hearted, and full of emotional truths. It's the kind of novel you hope will never end
—— Adrienne BrodeurA witty, easy-to-devour story of wealth and love's never-ending war in the modern age
—— ElleThis novel...is laugh-out-loud good....Love and money have always mixed like oil and water (not well), but Jackson finds new humor and warmth in her particularly witty debut
—— Harper's BazaarThis witty novel about the haves and have-mores is Succession with a soul
—— TIMEA novel about inheritance and the cultural inanities of the American WASP, set in a maximalist mansion? Don't mind if I do. Pineapple Street is more than a field report on the WASPs and their shabby-sweater super-wealth, of course-it's about class difference and the taxations of love
—— BustleSparkling . . . The book is smart and sharply observed, peppered with small gems
—— The Washington PostPineapple Street encapsulates the oftentimes ridiculous nature of the ultra-wealthy. The author seamlessly immerses readers in the lives of the Stocktons...[who] must ask themselves the uncomfortable question: Is it possible to be "good" with this much money?
—— ShondalandEver wondered what it's like to be a New York socialite? This account of three ficitionalied Brooklyn Heights women lets you into the world of tennis clubs, long lunches and party politics. Life for Sasha, Daley and Georgina isn't as rosy as it seems. Each has her own personal drama, but releatable failures keep you rooting for them. Remember: money can't buy you love
—— Woman and HomeA observed comedy of manners set among New York's one-per-centers . . . the angsty relationship they each have with the family coffers spices the escapist entertainment that ensues
—— Mail on SundaySharp-eyed and witty, this is writing which cuts to the quick. Engrossing, full of pleasure, sadness too, it traces loss and change in a world of the haves and the have nots
—— Daily Mail