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Books by Richard Murphy

Confessions of a Contractor

Richard Murphy - Author
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Book: Hardcover | 9.25 x 6.25in | 288 pages | ISBN 9780399155079 | 14 Aug 2008 | Putnam Adult | 18 - AND UP
Additional Formats:
Paperback: $15.00
eBook - Adobe reader: $24.95
eBook - eReader: $24.95
eBook - Microsoft Reader: $24.95
Confessions of a Contractor
A sexy, page-turning novel about the combustible mix that results when you blend desire, jealousy, and home renovation—written by a successful screenwriter and former contractor.

Henry Sullivan has spent fifteen years renovating houses for wealthy women in Los Angeles. To distance himself from his clients and the intimate environments he works in, Henry has devised a set of rules to keep out of trouble. Over the course of one very complicated summer, Henry begins breaking those rules after he takes on the houses and the lives of two very different women who used to be friends. Henry falls for both of them, and quickly finds himself erecting an emotional house of cards as he attempts to complete both jobs while piecing together the mysterious events that ended the women’s friendship. Confessions of a Contractor breaks new ground, knocking down the walls of the American home, giving the reader an insightful look into the way people behave behind closed doors—and the secrets they shelter within. Candid, amusing, and hugely entertaining, this novel reveals that a good contractor can fix just about any home, but no contractor will ever be able to fix a homeowner.

“In screenwriter Murphy’s breezy debut, Henry Sullivan, a single, in-demand L.A. contractor, can pick and choose his high-end home renovation jobs. Henry’s self- imposed rules—don’t sleep with clients and don’t take on too many projects at once—go out a half-finished window when he falls for two clients at once: Sally Stein, a single and successful purse designer, and Rebecca Paulson, an unhappily married mother of twins who is Sally’s former best friend. Why the two women he loves are no longer speaking becomes so intriguing to Henry that he begins to dig for answers while simultaneously finishing (or, rather, attempting to finish) both their houses. How Henry finally solves the mystery is neatly wrapped up at the end of this amazing tour through the perils of poking around in others’ intimate spaces.”
Publisher’s Weekly

“Hollywood screenwriter Murphy taps into his own lengthy history in the home- repair business to craft a debut novel about the uneven relationships between love and shelter. Murphy’s fictional doppelganger Henry Sullivan, a blue-collar contractor, is having a hell of a summer. After 15 years working a hammer, this home-repair whiz has learned a few tricks, including maintaining a firm grip on his common sense while clients are losing their minds. “Nothing epitomizes the American dream like a house,” he says. “It is the reason renovation has become the most expensive drug on the market, and the reason some people can’t stop doing it once they start.” Henry breaks his own rules by sleeping with Sally Stein, a charismatic purse designer who finds him to be a perfect accessory. At the same time, he can’t stop thinking about new client Rebecca, the wife of repellent real-estate guru Derrick Paulson, who buddies up to Henry to help him salvage his doomed marriage. As if the self-possessed Sullivan doesn’t have enough trouble with his love triangle, he’s also coping with retaliatory strikes by a vengeful oncologist who believes Henry slept with his wife; good-humored teasing by charming Mexican crew members Hector and Miguel; and his own unresolved feelings about a long-ruined relationship with a sexy Web designer named Gia. Murphy has a good feeling for dialogue, which gives the book’s uncomfortable relationships a strong sense of realism, despite the eccentric and sometimes outright crazy behavior of Henry’s love interests, and he ably captures the absurd humor that often springs from extreme wealth. But where the novel’s real charms lie is in Sullivan’s insightful observations of the thorny relationship between humans and their domiciles. Zen and the art of home repair: Home-improvement addicts, architectural hobbyists and amateur couples counselors should get plenty of mileage here.”
Kirkus


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