When Your Friends Show Up In Pairs SUSAN SHAPIRO Special to The Jewish News T he heroine of Was It Some- thing I Said? is Justine Schiff, a very funny 31- year-old dark-haired Jewish single woman living alone on Manhat- /- tan's Upper East Side. The book's author, Valerie Block, is a very funny 34-year-old dark-haired Jewish single woman living alone on the Upper West Side. "But Justine isn't me," Valerie says of her kooky character. "She's a Republican; I'm a liberal Democrat. She's a corporate lawyer; I'm a writer. OK, Justine has my eating problems, and we both drink salad dressing from the bottle ... but she's not me." Over dinner, Valerie talks about her comic first novel, love in the urban jungle and the problems of publishing fiction that everyone thinks is true. Set in the New York dating scene, Was It Something I Said? tells the story of Justine, a workaholic who laments her solo status: "Everyone was married, /--Teveryone. The dim, the bovine, the nasty. Girls who smelled. The biggest bitches at Spence had found their mates and were going about the busi- ness of their lives, taking vacations, reproducing themselves ... After a cer- tain age, people came in pairs ..." The spunky but cynical Justine meets Barry Cantor, a cute 34-year- old Upper West Side product manag- /- -) er, as their plane is about to crash. They share a dangerous kiss. They might stand a chance for long-lasting romance — if their bosses, room- mates, co-workers, cooks, dogs, friends and intrusive families would leave them alone. "My father read it and said, 'The fathers don't come off very well here.' told him it's not autobiographical. The book's mother, Carol, is not my mother. Carol is psychotic. My moth- er is lovely." OK, let's get this straight: Barry is Ms. Shapiro is author of The Male-to- Female Dictionary and recently corn- pleted Tangle, a romantic novel. ■ not based on Valerie's old boyfriend (though she admits that he's a compos- ite of several men she's known). She's never been in a plane crash (though once she got stuck in heavy turbulence in a plane. "I looked over to the other seat longingly and caught sight of ... an old woman," she says.) Her parents, unlike the crazy divorced parents in the book, are very togeth- er. Still, the characters and any possible real-life inspi- rations all live in Manhat- tan: Valerie Block grew up in New York. Her father is a businessman, like her younger brother. Her mother is a former pianist. Valerie went to school at Wktl:'32. A Dalton, Dartmouth and Barnard and received her MFA from Columbia. She published short stories in literary magazines and spent a year-and-a-half at ABC News as a desk assistant. "The desk had a better job," she says. She then worked at the New York Observer, "embarrassing myself, writing fluff about chess, the calendar and crossword puzzles," and then wrote grant proposals for the Educa- tion Alliance. Valerie's life as a struggling "Was It Something I Said?" sheds light on the dating scene in the urban jungle. writer wasn't always romantic. "I didn't want to go out of the house for seven years," she admits. The first draft of the book was 921 pages (now it is 359). Over the course of six rewrites, she changed the title four times. "First it was Magic Chicken, then Panic, Indifference and Joy, but nobody liked that one. Then See You Later ..." Finally she settled on Was It Something I Said?. After several rejections, Valerie finally sold the book to SoHo Press, which made her an offer stipulating that "I'd move the airport scene from chapter three to page five." She obliged, and it's been a whirlwind ever since. Valerie's given readings in New York, Washing- ton, D.C., and Chicago and everyone's clamoring for her next book. Still, all the critical acclaim has only led to more blind dates. "The mommy mafia keeps trying to fix me up," she says. "They have the zest of professional lobbyists. They keep sending me investment bankers who've never read a book, like they're saying, 'Somebody, anybody, marry this girl!'" She recently dated a nice Jewish guy "who was so ready to get married I could have been a Jewish Toyota — next one in line was it!" She says she's now "beyond cynical" and is "on strike from dating." Yet what about the book's happy ending? "It's hopeful, but not in the Hollywood sense," Valerie says. "It's happy with slight nausea. Jus- tine and Barry might be getting mar- ried, but they'll also be getting on each other's nerves for the rest of their lives." ❑ 4/17 1998 81