The late writer and novelist Petros Abatzoglou (1931-2004) grew up during the Nazi occupation of Greece, traveled extensively in Europe and America during his 30s, the settled in Greece where he lived the rest of his life. In addition to writing for newspapers and the radio, Abatzoglou authored numerous short stories and several novels. For What Does Mrs. Freeman Want?, he received the National Book Award in 1988. This is also his first novel translated into English. While lying on a beach in Greece with a female companion, the novel's narrator tells the story of a fiercely independent woman called "Mrs. Freeman". In his narration, the storyteller reveals an obsession with food, alcohol, and the need to be the center of a woman's attention as he paints a mental portrait of his own vision of the "ideal" woman. At times digressive, tender, humorous, pedantic, patronizing, and misogynist, What Does Mrs. Freeman Want? is also brilliant, engaging, and just the kind of novel that lingers on in the mind of the reader long after it has been finished and set back upon the bookshelf leaving us looking forward to more of Petros Abatzoglou's work to be translated into English by Kay Cicellis for an appreciative American readership.