Indiscretion by Charles Dubow (Harper, February 2013)
“Every story has a narrator.
Someone who writes it down after it’s all over. Why am I the narrator of this story? I am because
it is the story of my life---and of the people I love most….” So begins the
story of Harry and Madeleine Winslow, talented, charismatic couple, he a
National Book Award winner, she a gracious, beautiful woman of exceptional
breeding. Whether they are hosting a
formal dinner in their Manhattan brownstone or a weekend at their East Hampton
cottage, the pair makes their guests feel comfortable and like part of the
family. In their early forties, Harry
and Maddy are still admired by their peers but both find themselves attractive
to ingénue Claire who easily fits into their lives and becomes a part of their
circle. Claire is delighted to be
welcomed so warmly by such charming, real people, but soon their friendship
isn’t enough and an odyssey begins that will take the trio in various
configurations overseas to Rome, to France
and back to New York where they all learn the consequences of
overreaching and wanting more than is yours to have. Walter, a lifelong friend of Maddy narrates
the action, proving to be an unreliable narrator when readers realize he too is
in love with Maddy but is too reserved to have ever told her, much as
Fitzgerald’s Nick Carraway. Debut
novelist Dubow writes with the surety and sensuality of a veteran novelist
spinning a story that will keep pages turning, exploring relationships,
marriages, friends and lovers and all the variants. Subtle in places, overt in others, this is a
novel with writing to be savored even as the plot has you racing to an
inevitable ending you hope never to reach.
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