In Jill Hoffman's irresistible Stoned, the poet Maud Diamond not only indulges in reefer madness in her Beresford bathroom, but takes a much younger live-in lover, a handsome Russian (would-be-famous) artist, to the horror of her precocious children. An explosive triangle, by turns hilarious and heartbreaking, brilliantly drawn with outsized characters worthy of Dickens, lavish imagery, and impeccable comedic timing. Hoffman has written a book so poignant and pleasurable, like a Cr me Br l e for the eyes, you'll read it again and again. And yet for all its seeming decadence there is a purity here like a fawn running into the water.
-- Stephanie Emily Dickinson, Author of: Razor Wire Wilderness