Join Books.org — it's free

Journalists, Radio & Television - News & Media Biography, Television Journalists - Biography, Media - Women's Biography, Television News Programs, Television & Radio - Biography
Lying Together: My Russian Affair by Jennifer Beth Cohen — book cover

Lying Together: My Russian Affair

by Jennifer Beth Cohen
Write a review
Log in to track your reading progress.

Overview

    In January 1998, while the rest of her newsroom is chasing the Monica Lewinsky story, television journalist Jennifer Cohen gets a lead that takes her out of covering that scandal and deep into another one—the trafficking of sex slaves from the former Soviet Union into the United States. Knowing that the college crush she never quite forgot works for a St. Petersburg newspaper, she hires him to help out. Much to their surprise, they fall madly in love over thousands of miles of telephone line. Within weeks, Cohen finds herself engaged to marry a man she barely knows and on a plane to Russia. No one could have predicted the total collapse that followed—of the Russian economy, of her fiancé’s sobriety, of Cohen's mental health and physical safety, and of her professional aspirations.
    Cohen's vivid descriptions of her life in anything-goes Moscow—bribing government officials, meeting pimps in back alleys for interviews, being told by her boss to perpetuate American clichés about Russia in her pieces—are a colorful counterpart to the despair and loneliness that replaces the love between Cohen and her betrothed. Their battles with prescription drugs, alcoholic rages, and physical abuse are recounted with perspective and wit, offering a smart, poignant, and unvarnished look at a complicated relationship in a complicated land.

About the Author, Jennifer Beth Cohen

Jennifer Beth Cohen is an award-winning producer for CBS News/The Early Show and a writer based in New York City and Washington, D.C. She has been a news producer, documentary filmmaker, and a freelance journalist, and her work has appeared in the New York Times Magazine, New York, Maxim, and Allure. This is her first book.

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Log in to write one.

Editorials

A. George Schillinger

Cohen's language remains as journalistic at the end as it was at the beginning, but when she's describing the Dostoyevskian decline of her romance, her tale becomes simply riveting. Which raises a curious question: are the great Russian writers really novelists? Or might they just be gifted journalists, uncannily skilled at recording the irrational realities of their perverse land?
The New York Times

Publishers Weekly

It's January 1998, and TV producer Cohen learns of the trafficking of Russian women into the U.S. to work as sex slaves. To help cover the story, she hires Kevin, a Russian-based journalist she hasn't seen in years but who happens to be the object of her longstanding, college-era crush. This sharp, fast-paced book chronicles how Cohen chases down the story (and Kevin) and details their ensuing disastrous relationship. She's swooning over him instantly, via their e-mails, even before she's traveled to Russia to begin covering the story; and although it takes her almost 200 pages to realize she's made a bad choice, readers will see red flags well before, when one of Cohen's friends cautions her to slow down. Plus, the author's admission that she's bulimic and on Prozac hints that her judgment might not be clearheaded. Still, Cohen offers a fascinating glimpse inside the world of newsgathering and of contemporary Russia. However, Cohen's apologies for Kevin's erratic, hurtful behavior get tedious: "Give me a little affection and I forgive. Give me a lot of affection, I forget." Even at book's end, it's hard to tell whether she's eliminating him from her life or letting him hover in the background, thereby keeping her from healing herself. Agent, Stephanie Kip Rostan. (Sept. 15) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

It is the late 1990s, and the Soviet Union has dissolved. With the good timing you would expect of a news producer, Cohen covers Russia as it adjusts to the breakup. She has loftier ambitions than her New York City job and wants to change her single status as well. She thus reconnects with Kevin, a fellow Russian-language enthusiast she always hankered after in college. Now a journalist in Russia, he alerts her to rumors of sex trafficking between Russia and New York City. Initially lured by Kevin's rawness and Russia's seeming lawlessness, which she convincingly conveys, Cohen comes to realize that her ideas about living in Russia, advancing her career there, and marrying Kevin are more fantasy than reality. Using her journalistic skills, she ably captures readers' interest in the opening paragraph of each chapter, then continues to flesh out her story. Though she covers less than a year, this intense period in her life is so colorfully described that it feels as if much more time has elapsed. Recommended for public libraries.-Gina Kaiser, Univ. of the Sciences in Philadelphia Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
September 15, 2004
Publisher
University of Wisconsin Press
Pages
213
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780299201005

Similar books