It's another routine day in Lucy's life when she gets the call. Lucy lives in a small town in England with her husband, Jake and her two sons, Paddy and Ted. After the boys came, Lucy scaled back her work and now works from home, writing copy for various enterprises, from manuals to articles to editing someone else's content. Jake is a professor at the local university in biology. All in all, a routine life that a myriad of women are living.
Then the call comes. It is the husband of a woman who Jake works with. He informs Lucy that Jake is having an affair with his wife, Vanessa. Lucy doesn't really remember how she hung up. She slowly takes in the news, reeling emotionally. Now she remembers late nights at work or casual mentions of lunches and dinners with Vanessa. Vanessa isn't even some young exciting woman; she is probably ten years older than Jake and Lucy.
When Jake comes home, he doesn't deny it. He is appalled that Lucy knows and contrite, willing to do anything to make things right. He insists he will end it immediately. Lucy is furious but wonders if leaving him is the right thing to do for the boys. She moves him to the sofa while she decides what comes next. When Lucy was working on her doctorate she studied the classics and was drawn to the story of the harpies. Vengeful, powerful figures, they stole and ravaged and did whatever they wanted. She sees something of them in herself and vows to solve this crisis as a harpy would.
The solution occurs. She will do three hurtful things to Jake. He will not know in advance what they are or when they are coming. They will appear out of the blue and he is not allowed to complain or do anything in retaliation. Perhaps then they can find a way out of the morass of pain and hurt. Jake agrees. The first occurrence comes quickly and takes Jake by surprise. He cannot say anything but must soldier on through the pain while Lucy finds that she feels more powerful and in control, that the inflicting of pain on another eases her own. Will she be able to stop herself before she does something irretrievable?
Megan Hunter has written a searing novel that explores the pain that infidelity can create in a relationship and the diminution that marriage and family can cause to a woman. It explores the dynamics of marriage and how children change lives as their needs must inevitably come first and how those needs are still met primarily by women. I listened to the audio of this novel and the clear, crisp diction of the narrator added to the experience and provided depth to my mental picture of Lucy. This book is recommended for readers of literary fiction.
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