Helen of Troy; and Rose
About This Book
Two linked stories examine the strains and consolations of intimate life. The first follows a widower whose plans for a comfortable second marriage collide with his young son’s fierce attachment and the awkward care of a prospective companion, exposing tensions among duty, grief, and domestic expectation. The second follows a newly married woman through a tremulous, ecstatic first week among southern islands, registering how beauty and strangeness reshape private feeling. Both pieces concentrate on interior emotional shifts, small social rituals, and the ways affection negotiates loss, desire, and the adjustments required by shared life.
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