Nan McCarthy

author of Since You Went Away, Chat, Connect, Crash, & Live ’Til I Die

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    • Since You Went Away, Part Three: Summer
    • Since You Went Away, Part Two: Spring
    • Since You Went Away, Part One: Winter
    • Chat: book one
    • Connect: book two
    • Crash: book three
    • Coming Soon
    • Live ’Til I Die
    • Chat (1998 edition)
    • Connect (1998 edition)
    • Crash (1998 edition)
    • Quark Design
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    • Live ’Til I Die: excerpt
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    • Buy: Since You Went Away (Part Three: Summer)
    • Buy: Since You Went Away (Part Two: Spring)
    • Buy: Since You Went Away (Part One: Winter)
    • Buy: Chat (book 1)
    • Buy: Connect (book 2)
    • Buy: Crash (book 3)
    • Buy: Live ’Til I Die
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1 Live ‘Til I Die: a memoir of my father’s life

  • December 6, 2001
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · biography/memoir · Blog · Books · Live ’Til I Die · Titles

Live ’Til I Die: a memoir of my father’s life
Nan McCarthy
(Rainwater Press, 2001) 246 pages, $14.95

In its opening pages, the final days of 39-year old Ben “Buddy” Johnson’s life are chronicled in excruciating detail through the eyes of ICU nurse Maggie Quinn. Here is the story of an alcoholic who doesn’t come out the other side—a brilliant, charismatic young man who comes of age on Chicago’s South Side in the 1940s and ‘50s, rises to prominence in his career as a trade-show executive at the Chicago Amphitheatre and McCormick Place in the 1960s, and dies horrifically of alcoholic cirrhosis in 1971, leaving a wife and two young daughters.

Thirty years later his youngest daughter sorts through the pieces of her father’s life by interviewing his boyhood friends. Through their alternately humorous and heart-wrenching stories, she learns about the man her father was before his mind and body were overcome by alcoholism. At once harrowing and hopeful, Live ‘Til I Die confronts the physical and emotional devastation wrought by chronic alcohol abuse—yet manages to offer up love, laughter, and tears while allowing a daughter to restore the memory of a father she barely knew.

“Studs Lonigan meets The Liar’s Club”

“Charts new territory in the field of addiction memoirs”

Click here for purchase information for Live ’Til I Die.

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Chat: a very modern love story

  • August 3, 1998
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Blog · Books · fiction · Titles

Chat: a very modern love story (Book 1)
Nan McCarthy
(Simon & Schuster, 1998) 123 pages, $6

Bev, a tough-minded book editor who’s been logging online for years, cautiously begins corresponding with Max, a restless advertising copywriter who strikes up an email conversation with her. With each email exchange, two people who are at first faceless come vibrantly alive through their sometimes serious, frequently entertaining, and always believable messages.

Readers won’t be able to resist the temptation to “eavesdrop” on Bev and Max’s intimate correspondence as she becomes less inhibited, he becomes more fascinated, and their relationship grows more intense. A tantalizing adventure, Chat brings romance into the age of technology with startling results.

“This is Chekhov for the ’90s: lust, romance, and adultery, cyber-style.” —Mademoiselle

“Draws you from page to page… Sequels are on the way, and I can hardly wait.” —The New York Times

“You won’t need a modem to appreciate the charm of this virtual romance.” —Glamour

“Bev and Max’s mingling is electric.” —Washington Post Book World

“A refreshing twist.” —Publishers Weekly

“Silicon Valley’s Story of O. From the first line, we’re hooked.” —House Organ: A Magazine of the Arts

“Takes a surprising, satisfying turn in a cliffhanger climax.” —Newcity Chicago

“A lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope.” —Syracuse Herald-American

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0 Connect: a very modern love story

  • August 2, 1998
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Blog · Books · fiction · Titles

Connect: a very modern love story (Book 2)
Nan McCarthy
(Simon & Schuster, 1998) 125 pages, $6

In the second novel of her acclaimed cybertrilogy, Nan McCarthy continues the wild ride that began in Chat. Readers are irresistibly drawn from page to page while “eavesdropping” on the private email conversations of Bev and Max, two strangers who met online. Their lives now unexpectedly intertwined, Bev and Max reveal themselves only through what they choose to say—and leave unsaid—in their increasingly intimate correspondence.

With a gifted ear for the ups and downs of love in the age of technology, McCarthy creates a story that’s as seductive as it is surprising. Bev and Max’s sexually charged, humorous, and thought-provoking exchanges propel the reader into an online world that proves entertaining, addicting, and filled with unforeseen consequences.

“This is Chekhov for the ’90s: lust, romance, and adultery, cyber-style.” —Mademoiselle

“Draws you from page to page… Sequels are on the way, and I can hardly wait.” —The New York Times

“You won’t need a modem to appreciate the charm of this virtual romance.” —Glamour

“Bev and Max’s mingling is electric.” —Washington Post Book World

“A refreshing twist.” —Publishers Weekly

“Silicon Valley’s Story of O. From the first line, we’re hooked.” —House Organ: A Magazine of the Arts

“Takes a surprising, satisfying turn in a cliffhanger climax.” —Newcity Chicago

“A lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope.” —Syracuse Herald-American

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Crash: a very modern love story

  • August 1, 1998
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Blog · Books · fiction · Titles

Crash: a very modern love story (Book 3)
Nan McCarthy
(Simon & Schuster, 1998) 125 pages, $6

The adventure chronicled in Chat and Connect, the first two novels in Nan McCarthy’s heralded cybertrilogy, comes to a jolting conclusion in Crash. As the reader continues to “eavesdrop” on the private email conversations of Bev and Max, two strangers who met online, their relationship grows more intense and complex than they ever imagined.

With a true storyteller’s flourish, McCarthy brings to a close a love story told entirely through two people’s impassioned exchanges. Laced with humor and provocative confessions, the tension-filled conclusion will leave readers thinking about Bev and Max long after the last page.

“This is Chekhov for the ’90s: lust, romance, and adultery, cyber-style.” —Mademoiselle

“Draws you from page to page… Sequels are on the way, and I can hardly wait.” —The New York Times

“You won’t need a modem to appreciate the charm of this virtual romance.” —Glamour

“Bev and Max’s mingling is electric.” —Washington Post Book World

“A refreshing twist.” —Publishers Weekly

“Silicon Valley’s Story of O. From the first line, we’re hooked.” —House Organ: A Magazine of the Arts

“Takes a surprising, satisfying turn in a cliffhanger climax.” —Newcity Chicago

“A lively, free-flowing, spontaneous outburst of curiosity, anxiety and hope.” —Syracuse Herald-American

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0 Quark Design: a step-by-step guide to page layout software

  • August 6, 1995
  • by Nan McCarthy
  • · Blog · Books · how-to · Titles

Quark Design: a step-by-step guide to page layout software for designers
Nancy J. McCarthy
(Peachpit Press/Graphic-sha Publishing, 1995)

This four-color, award-winning how-to book was published simultaneously by Peachpit Press in the U.S. and Graphic-sha Publishing in Japan. A finalist for the Publishers Marketing Association’s Benjamin Franklin Award, (Computer Books) in 1996, Quark Design was also published in Chinese and Spanish.

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