

I also enjoyed the story Louise was writing and how the story changed based on what was happening in Louise’s personal life at that time.

I found myself laughing aloud at parts and feeling like I was in the room with Louise. I really felt Caroline writing the story with her whole body. I learned so much about the CIA censoring literary works and their surveillance of authors during the Cold War. I read 240 pages in just one day and woke up early to finish the story. This historical fiction novel had me hooked. Deeply researched and propulsive, The Lunar Housewife is a historical thriller rich with meaning for modern readers. And when Louise is forced to consider her future sooner than she planned, she needs to decide whether she can trust Joe for the rest of her life. Peppered with cameos from real life luminaries such as Truman Capote and James Baldwin, and full of period detail and nail-biting tension, Caroline Woods channels 1950s New York glamour as Louise’s investigation brings her face to face with shocking secrets, brutal sexism, and life or death consequences.

Can Louise stand by and let doors keep opening for her, while the establishment sells out and censors her fellow writers? As her suspicions and paranoia mount, Louise’s own novel “The Lunar Housewife” changes shape, colored by her newfound knowledge. Meanwhile, opportunities are falling in Louise’s lap that she’d have to be crazy to refuse, including an interview with America’s most famous living author, Ernest Hemingway. But when she overhears Joe and his business partner fighting about listening devices and death threats, Louise can’t help but investigate, and she quickly finds herself wading into dangerous waters.As Louise pieces together rumors, hunches, and clues, the picture begins to come together–Downtown’s strings are being pulled by someone powerful, and that someone doesn’t want artists or writers criticizing Uncle Sam. She’s filed some of the best pieces at her boyfriend Joe’s brand new literary magazine, Downtown (albeit under a male pseudonym), her relationship still makes her weak at the knees, and the science fiction romance she’s writing on the side, “The Lunar Housewife,” is going swimmingly.

Caroline Woods pens a story that will linger in the memory!” -Kate Quinn, New York Times bestselling author of The Alice NetworkNew York City, 1953: Louise Leithauser’s star is on the rise. “The Lunar Housewife is wonderfully entertaining and slyly subversive. The Lunar Housewife: A Novel By Caroline WoodsĪ stylish and suspenseful historical page-turner following an up-and-coming journalist who stumbles onto a web of secrets, deceptions, and mysteries at a popular new literary magazine–inspired by the true story of CIA intervention in Cold War American arts and letters.
