EBOOK

Lover

A Novel

Anna Raverat
(0)
Pages
336
Year
2017
Language
English

About

Kate-a wife, a mother of two, and a senior executive at a multinational hotel company-has made caring for others her life's work, and she's good at it. But when she opens her husband's computer to find a series of email exchanges with an unknown woman, it all begins to fall apart. After ten years of marriage, Kate is forced to take a closer look at her relationship with her husband, and she must ask herself: How well do I really know him?

Things begin to spiral at work, too, with the political machinations in the office reaching an increasingly Shakespearean level of drama and ferocity. Kate gets caught between the ravings of power-hungry bosses and her job, which is to make the hotel guests happy. With both her work and home lives crumbling around her, Kate, for the first time, begins to think about what it is she really wants: from her husband, from her job, from her life.

Lover, the British writer Anna Raverat's U.S. debut, is an observation of love, work, and life as seen through the lens of a troubled marriage. With the irresistible wit of Emma Straub's The Vacationers, the compelling candor of Ayelet Waldman's Love and Other Impossible Pursuits, and no shortage of brightening humor, Raverat paints an acute portrait of the female psyche, freshly exploring intimacy and the politics of work. Intellectually rich and captivatingly poignant, Lover is the powerful story of a woman making her way in the world.

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Reviews

"In Lover, Anna Raverat tells the beautiful, moving, complicated story of how a good marriage turns bad, creating a mad-fast read that newly explores what it means to be a wife, mother, daughter, friend, and coworker navigating the inanities of corporate life. You'll never drink from a glass in a hotel room again."
Helen Klein Ross, author of What Was Mine
"Something like a literary equivalent of films such as An Unmarried Woman or Kramer vs. Kramer; there is a plot, but it matters less than the character study"
Ron Hogan, The Dallas Morning News
"A clever novel full of sharp social observations about the shallowness of the contemporary world and its myriad clichés . . . a little Bridget Jones and a whole lot of Maria Semple."
Elizabeth Taylor, The National Book Review

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