Summary: Lily Tuck’s critically-lauded, bestselling I Married You for Happiness
was hailed by the Boston Globe as “an artfully crafted still life of one
couple’s marriage.” In her singular new novel Sisters, Tuck gives a very different
portrait of marital life, exposing the intricacies and scandals of a new
marriage sprung from betrayal.
Tuck’s unnamed narrator lives with her new husband, his two teenagers,
and the unbanishable presence of his first wife―known only as she. Obsessed
with her, our narrator moves through her days presided over by the all-too-real
ghost of the first marriage, fantasizing about how the first wife lives her
life. Will the narrator ever equal she intellectually, or ever forget the
betrayal that lies between them? And what of the secrets between her husband
and she, from which the narrator is excluded? The daring and precise build up
to an eerily wonderful denouement is a triumph of subtlety and surprise.
With Sisters,
Lily Tuck delivers riveting psychological portrait of marriage, infidelity, and
obsession; charting with elegance and insight love in all its phases.
Angie’s comments: The prose is sparse and beautiful. The book seems more like a
poem. The characters, especially the narrator, are familiar to anyone, and each
one of us can relate to the anxieties of the narrator. The ending is
surprising.
Recommended for readers of literary fiction.
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March 5, 2018
Sisters
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