Love and Other Hazards is a novel about urban singles stumbling toward fulfillment in an odyssey of sex, love, and parenting. 
Glenda  Fieldston is at the Metropolitan Museum of Art with her seven-year-old  daughter, Astrid, when Eugene Lerman comes walking by with his  eight-year-old daughter, Meredith, a schoolmate of Astrid’s. The  families spot each other, Glenda and Eugene engage in long-range cursory  assessments, and then they go their separate ways.
But not for  long. Glenda and Eugene cross paths professionally soon after, and  circumstances at work bring them into close association. So begins a  friendship fraught with complications. Glenda’s independence is  self-imposed and fierce. Eugene’s was foisted on him by a wife who left  him. Although Glenda’s and Eugene’s personal demons are incompatible,  their longings are, confoundedly, in harmony. Their cautious friendship  is further inhibited by past and present relationships, and it remains  to be seen if they can break out of their set ways to make a break for  uncharted love.  
 
 
 
                
               
            