![]() ![]() But now I suspect he wanted to get it over with, before he changed his mind.” Eventually, the novel switches perspectives and offers Patrick’s journal entries from the past. ![]() About Tom and Marion’s whirlwind wedding, she writes, “At the time it was thrilling, this dizzy rush into marriage, and it was flattering, too. The narrative framing allows her to offer insight into her past from the perch of the present (“I remember that I once felt intense and secret things, just like you, Patrick"). She tells the story of her pining for Tom and how their friendship turned into (an oft one-sided) courtship. ![]() Opening in October 1999, retired schoolteacher Marion is writing a “confession of sorts” to Patrick, her husband’s lover, for whom she is caring after a near-fatal stroke: “When I am finished, I plan to read this account to you, Patrick, because you can’t answer back any more.” From there, Marion’s letter travels back 48 years to when she met her future husband, Tom. Forster, Roberts’ new book captures an unconventional-and illegal-love triangle in 1950s England. Inspired by the love life of novelist E.M. A woman looks back on her life with her husband and his gay lover. ![]()
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