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Buy Me Love

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Described by Publishers Weekly as Cooley's "sharp latest", "Cooley has a sure hand in probing the intersection of artistic ambition and money. This hopeful take is sure to move readers."

In Brooklyn, New York, in 2005, Ellen Portinari buys a lottery ticket on a whim; not long after, she realizes she's won a hundred-million-dollar jackpot. With a month to redeem the ticket, she tells no one but her alcoholic brother—a talented composer whose girlfriend has died in a terrorist attack abroad—about her preposterous good luck.
As the clock ticks, Ellen caroms from incredulity to giddiness to dread as she tries to reckon with the potential consequences of her win. She becomes unexpectedly involved with a man and boy she's met at her local gym. While she grapples with the burden of secret-keeping and the tug of a new intimacy, a Brooklyn street artist named Blair Talpa is contending with her own challenges: a missing brother, an urge to make art that will "derange orbits," and a lack of money.
En route to redeem the lottery ticket, Ellen finds her prospects entwining by chance with Blair's—which allows Ellen to reimagine luck's relation to loss, and the reader to revel in surprise.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      April 26, 2021
      Cooley (The Archivist) examines the unexpected aftermath of a lottery win in her sharp latest. Ellen Portinari is a 52-year-old freelance editor, aspiring poet, and happily single woman living in New York City. After forgetting she’d bought a lottery ticket, she learns she holds the winning $100 million ticket, and the potential windfall causes her to reassess her life. She thinks about her parents—a gin-soaked mother and a closeted, flamboyant star-baritone father—and gets back in touch with her genius-composer brother who is dealing with a nearly unbearable grief over the death of his girlfriend. Ellen knows the money will have a huge impact on her relationships with her family, and wonders how it will change her poetic aspirations and her romantic prospects. Meanwhile, recent art-school graduate Blair is “a boy in a girl’s body” who creates political public art to exorcise her demons and needs funding for her next project. Though unknown to one another, Ellen and Blair share an unspoken desire to connect through expression and, in a predictable twist, their coincidental meeting sparks a potentially life-changing act of creative destruction. While some of the developments come across as implausible, Cooley has a sure hand in probing the intersection of artistic ambition and money. This hopeful take is sure to move readers.

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2021

      Author of the much-loved The Archivist, Cooley here gives Ellen Portinari a winning lottery ticket in 2005 New York and a month to redeem it. But Ellen worries about the consequences of staking her claim, even as she gets tangled up with a troubled Brooklyn street artist and a man and boy she meets at the gym.

      Copyright 2021 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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