![]() I was reading the lurid and darkly funny story of Julie, a married woman who swung for an affair and missed. Minneapolis’s newest resident and one of the most accomplished fiction writers working today-of her six books, all published by Random House, three have been New York Times bestsellers, and one, Eligible, is being adapted into a TV series on ABC-was twiddling her thumbs at the coffee shop that I had suggested, at the time I had chosen, waiting for me. ![]() ![]() Her latest book of short stories, You Think It, I’ll Say It-a Reese’s Book Club pick-was splayed open on my lap, as it had been for many bus rides previous. 18 merrily bumped along the potholes of Eat Street, hitting every red light. “It seems I did not pick the fastest bus,” I texted the recent transplant from St. She was already at Five Watt Coffee in Minneapolis’s Kingfield neighborhood waiting for me. ![]() My interview with Curtis Sittenfeld began on the bus. ![]()
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