(7/18/2023)
This is not a simple book. These are not simple characters. On the one hand, we have Louise, a woman who is drowning in an emotional morass that requires copious amounts of alcohol and pills for her to make it through a day. She is fleeing a neglected childhood, a sacrificed youth and visions of a reclusive, lonely spinsterhood for her future. On the other hand, we have Henri, a solitary man who has recurring nightmares about his vanished idyllic childhood, who also sacrificed his youth to please his parents and who suffers intense guilt for past transgressions. These two troubled people meet and are thrown together through a complicated series of events, a coil that winds tighter and tighter as the story progresses. I loved Louise's character because she is no cookie-cutter woman. She isn't the sacrificial lamb I expected from a woman of this time period. She had enough of martyrdom and, once a line was crossed, looked out for herself with a cold, steely-eyed determination. Henri needed to pull himself up the seedy, life of crime that threatened to take over and cripple his future. So, we have two complex characters, each running from disastrous pasts towards impossible futures, until…they meet. Intriguing story. Not the happiest book I've ever read, but satisfying, nonetheless. It would make a good movie.