How James Frey Channeled Danielle Steel in Next to Heaven
The writer has a new novel out, and this time, the drama—set among Connecticut’s elite—is all on the page.

James Frey has found peace in New Canaan, Connecticut. In the decades since his memoir of rehabilitation A Million Little Pieces became the center of controversy in the publishing world—it initially found a place in Oprah’s book club before a number of exaggerations and falsehoods were exposed—he’s found a sanctuary away from the limelight.
When we speak, Frey has just returned from a college roadtrip with his son. It’s clear that while family time and a life away from the spotlight are determining factors in his transformation, it’s his home of more than a decade that seems most crucial to his calm attitude, a transformation from the early, irascible, years of his success. Looking out of the picture window in his living room in early April, he says, “It’s just the most beautiful place. It’s majestic.” It’s surprising then, that such an idyllic setting inspired Next to Heaven, his new tale of lies and deceit set among Connecticut’s one percent.
The novel centers on four couples in the town of New Bethlehem, a town which he describes as a “version” of New Canaan. Frey is quick to note, however, that it is his town, “not his neighbors,” that is mirrored in the book. The denizens of New Bethlehem, some new, others very old, shop at the same expensive supermarkets, send their children to the same prestigious school, and play tennis at the same exclusive country club. They also share secrets—financial turmoil, affairs, and drug problems—that threaten to ruin their artfully cultivated image of perfection.