Seventh Avenue
by Norman Bogner
Seventh Avenue tells the story of tenement-born Jay Blackman's rise to become king of Manhattan's garment district at the height of the Great Depression. But Blackman's restlessness and competitiveness tears the seams of his personal life. Among his victims are his wife Rhoda, who manages the dress shop that gives his career its start; Eva, a sophisticated, cynical designer, whose family he eventually destroys; and Terry, a beautiful, bored heiress, who represents all the status Jay dreams of acquiring. Seventh Avenue is a sharply drawn novel that depicts a ruthless young man exploiting every opportunity and person he encounters.