More than two decades after the publication of her landmark 1996 novel "Sex and the City," Candace Bushnell has written a follow-up. "Is There Still Sex in the City?" (Grove Press, $26) examines the lives of a group of female friends, only now they're in their 50s, not their 30s. And there are other differences.
Bushnell, 60, spoke with Newsday about her latest.
Q: Unlike "Sex and the City," this book is not about Carrie Bradshaw. The narrator is Candace. That's you, right? So why isn't the book a memoir?
A: In a memoir you want people, places and events to be real. Here they are representational. It's auto-fiction. All the stories are true, but some of the details are changed.
One thing that's similar about the two books is their inspiration. When I wrote "Sex and the City," I had reached a part of my life there was no road map for. Women in their 30s weren't supposed to be single. But there we were. Then it happened all over again when I hit my 50s. Divorced, single, and again there was no road map. "Over 50" is not a demographic people have paid much attention to. But I looked around and saw that there were a lot of people like me.
Q: You coin the term Middle-Aged Madness, MAM, to describe what you and your friends went through.
A: Going from a lifestyle oriented around raising children to the nonreproductive, postmenopausal world, women are finding themselves in a life they never expected or even thought much about. In addition to the real physical changes, there are huge emotional disruptions.
Everybody has to deal with loss — so many kinds of loss, including the loss of your value to society. You're a woman over 50? You're not important, that's the message you get.