Susan Isaacs (born December 7, 1943) is an American novelist, essayist, and screenwriter. She was born in Brooklyn, New York to Helen Asher Isaacs a homemaker, and Morton Isaacs 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.
She married Elkan Abramowitz, a lawyer, in 1968. She left work in 1970 to stay at home with her newborn son, Andrew. Three years later, in 1973, she gave birth to her daughter Elizabeth. She freelanced during this time, writing both speeches and magazine articles. She now lives on Long Island with her husband. Her first novel (and first attempt at fiction), Compromising Positions, was published in 1978. It was chosen as a main selection of the Book of the Month Club and, like all of her subsequent novels, was a New York Times bestseller. Her fiction has been translated into thirty different languages all over the world. She has also written a work of cultural criticism, Brave Dames and Wimpettes: What Women are Really Doing on Page and Screen.
Susan Isaacs is a novelist, essayist and screenwriter.
Susie or Susan Isaacs may also refer to:
Let me hear you say
it's alright
cause tonight
Your body next to mine
in my dreams
in my mind
On and on
the beat goes on
till the break of dawn
there's a fire burning
let the feeling take
control
of your body and soul
shout it out
I say yeah, Baby
I say yeah, Baby
I wanne make you mine
you're so cool
you're so fine
I wanne make you see
that we're 2
of a kind
On and on
the beat goes on
till the break of dawn
there's a fire burning
let the feeling take
control
of your body and soul
shout it out
I say yeah, Baby
I say yeah, Baby
I say yeah, Baby