The Senator's Wife |
| | | | Title: | The Senator's Wife | | Author: | Sue Miller | | Publisher: | Knopf | | Type: | Book / Hardcover | | Publication Date: | 08 January, 2008 | | ISBN / ISBN-13: | 0307264203 / 9780307264206 | | List Price: | $24.95 | | You Save: | $8.48 | | Amazon Price: | $16.47 | |
This book is also available, brand-new, from 3rd-party marketplace sellers at Amazon.com, from $11.47. | The HTML code below can be pasted onto your web-site, your MySpace page, or blog - or any number of similar places - to create a link to this page: If, instead of a text link, you'd like to create a link to this page which will display the book cover, if it's available, then the code below will do exactly that:
Check for the same book at these other US book sites:
[ Abebooks ] [ Alibris ] [ Barnes & Noble ] [ Half.com ] [ Powells ] … or check UK bookstores | Editorial Review / Publisher's Information:
Product Description
Once again Sue Miller takes us deep into the private lives of women with this mesmerizing portrait of two marriages exposed in all their shame and imperfection, and in their obdurate, unyielding love. The author of the iconic The Good Mother and the best-selling While I Was Gone brings her marvelous gifts to a powerful story of two unconventional women who unexpectedly change each other’s lives.
Meri is newly married, pregnant, and standing on the cusp of her life as a wife and mother, recognizing with some terror the gap between reality and expectation. Delia Naughton—wife of the two-term liberal senator Tom Naughton—is Meri’s new neighbor in the adjacent New England town house. Delia’s husband’s chronic infidelity has been an open secret in Washington circles, but despite the complexity of their relationship, the bond between them remains strong. What keeps people together, even in the midst of profound betrayal? How can a journey imperiled by, and sometimes indistinguishable from, compromise and disappointment culminate in healing and grace? Delia and Meri find themselves leading strangely parallel lives, both reckoning with the contours and mysteries of marriage, one refined and abraded by years of complicated intimacy, the other barely begun.
Here are all the things for which Sue Miller has always been beloved—the complexity of experience precisely rendered, the richness of character and emotion, the superb economy of style—fused with an utterly engrossing story that has a great deal to say to women, and men, of all ages.
| Other Items You May Enjoy: Browse Books From These Related Subjects: Customer Reviews:
Creepy 11 May, 2008 - a total timewaster - uninteresting and unlikeable characters - inexplicable behaviors followed by a totally creepy and unbelievable ending - she must have sold this on her previous output (which, by the way, also seem to involve a lot of unappealing souls) - I hate myself for sticking it out to the dreadful finish ...ugh! (I gave it one star, assuming none was not an option>)
- Reviewed by customer ID: A2ZKWNL1VXA2DT
Disappointed And Grossed Out 17 May, 2008 Well this is the first book I have read by Sue Miller and I will have to say she is a very good writer however I found all the characters very sad individuals. Though I am sure there are people like that, the book demonstrates a very jaded look at life. I found the ending shocking and I was totally disgusted by the event that ended the relationships. I will not recommend it to any of my friends and I can't understand why it was on the best seller list for so long.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A33WFM5WGKK918
In Defense Of Monica Lewinsky? 06 May, 2008 Not Her Best
There is always a seductive aspect to Sue Miller's novels and this one is no different. Intimacies are obsessively detailed until they embed the reader in the complicated emotional lives of her characters. She's a very engaging writer and there are many good moments of emotional tension and sexual jealousy and deception in The Senator's Wife.
But that trait, in so many of Miller's women, which borders on the slatternly looms large in this story; and the questionable moral choices made are less understandable here than in her other work. Some characters' willingness to gratify their own sexual need at the expense of their own and others' emotional bonds are not so much ethically ambiguous as pathological.
The story parallels two couples living as neighbors in a New England town. Meri and Nathan are in their 30s, newlywed. Delia and Tom are in their 70s, he a former well-known U.S. Senator. Set in the early `90s, this story also parallels the Clinton presidency in several ways. Tom--a charismatic, liberal, womanizing politician whose wife never divorced him despite repeated humiliations--suffers a terrible setback in 1994. Delia, the senator's wife, is a strong character in her own right. She has lived separately from Tom for many years and has an independent life, but is still his lover and friend. She chooses to help him after his setback. Meri is the Monica Lewinsky character. In Meri's case, her background is one of poverty and maternal neglect. Thus damaged, she occasionally steals, often lies, and has thoroughly snooped through Delia's private papers. She has few, if any, inner resources and seems only able to define herself through male sexual desire; she only feels whole in the gaze of male attention. She is also portrayed as a bright, educated journalist who is married to Nathan, a more attractive, "patrician" and honest person than she. I found her character implausible, unsympathetic and annoying. Ultimately Meri plays a sexual "game" with Tom as they both indulge a need to feed their desperate egos through sexual dalliance. Meri lies about her role and suffers no consequences to her family although others are hurt.
The problem with all this is that it appears Miller wants us to exonerate Meri and to agree with her delusion that, really, what she did was "out of love". And that Delia, who "prides herself" on being forgiving, is actually an unforgiving person because she only wants to live with Tom if he cannot be his old self--that Delia is emasculating Tom by wanting fidelity in return for her care and commitment. In other words, the story's moral ambiguity slips into negative judgment of the honorable Delia and exoneration of the damaged Meri and reprobate Tom who help each other restore their flagging self-esteem through sexual games. It's as if an alcoholic who had a history of DUIs, and had even maimed a pedestrian or two, was feeling depressed not drinking, so another alcoholic who also needed a lift brought a bottle of scotch to him for the two of them to drink. They felt restored and lively as they drank, though some people got hurt, but opening that bottle of scotch was an act of love, we are expected to believe.
If The Senator's Wife is supposed to be a defense of Monica Lewinsky or Meri, I don't believe it works. In addition, there were some errors and unpolished, mundane prose in this book which would not usually occur in a work by someone of Miller's stature. The text seemed to need another run-through, but perhaps it was rushed to publication in order to coincide with Hillary Clinton's presidential campaign.
- Reviewed by customer ID: A2C4ANTWE5QWTL
Why Didn't I Read The Reviews First? 05 May, 2008 This might qualify as the worst book I've ever read--what a complete waste of time! Do not, under any circumstances, waste two days of your life reading this insipid character develop. I've never hated a fictional character as much as Meri Fowler. Is the name a precursor of the ending? Without a doubt!
Complete waste of time. Pitiful!
- Reviewed by customer ID: A1ZND88KPR0P7Q
So Disappointing 09 May, 2008 I just finished reading "The Senators Wife", and I'm asking myself why I even bothered. I've been a fan Of Sue Miller's since The Good Mother, which I consider one of my all time favorite books by any author. I normally gravitate towards novels about women and their relationships with each other. As I read this book, I was intrigued by the bonding between the two vastly different women. I felt they were connected by their efforts to sustain their individual marriages, which were at completely different stages, and I also felt a mother daughter bond. between the two. Then, just as I was relating to their willingness to help each other through their struggles in deep and meaningful ways, I'm completely disappointed and a little bit creeped out by the last six chapters. What I was interpreting as a supportive, uplifting pairing of two strong women, suddenly became a shallow, selfish act of betrayal done in, of all things, the name of love. Very strange, very disappointing.
- Reviewed by customer ID: AM9I190RRGTV
|