She was born in Brooklyn, New York, to Helen Asher Isaacs, a homemaker, and Morton Isaacs,[1] an electrical engineer. At Queens College, she majored in English and minored in economics. After college, she worked as a senior editor at Seventeen magazine and also as a freelance political speechwriter.[2] She is Jewish.[3]
She married Elkan Abramowitz, a lawyer, in 1968.[1] She left work in 1970 to stay at home with her newborn son. Three years later, in 1973, she gave birth to her daughter.[citation needed]
During this time she freelanced, writing both speeches and magazine articles. She now lives on Long Island with her husband.[2]
Career
Her first novel (and first attempt at fiction), Compromising Positions, was published in 1978.[4] It was chosen as a main selection of the Book of the Month Club and was a New York Times bestseller. Her fiction has been translated into thirty different languages. She has also written a work of cultural criticism, Brave Dames and Wimpettes: What Women are Really Doing on Page and Screen, and a novella, A Hint of Strangeness.