In a fancy Connecticut suburb, a woman is forced to come to terms with the choices she made nearly a decade earlier.
Molly has a seemingly idyllic life in tony Flynn Cove, Connecticut, where she teaches yoga and resides with her reliable, catalog-handsome husband, Hunter, and adorable daughter, Stella. The only visible cracks in this picture-perfect world? A dearth of good friends, a rash of unpleasant fellow mothers, and fertility issues. Oh, and within the opening pages of the book, there are suggestive hints of the one who got away: That would be Jake Danner, a musician boyfriend from Molly’s years in New York City, a time when she was working on her MFA in creative writing and rich in close friends. When the beautiful, entertaining, and intriguing Sabrina turns up at both Molly’s Flynn Cove yoga class and her fertility clinic, she immediately ameliorates the lack-of-friendship aspect of Molly’s life, bringing a welcome relief from the stuffier elements of the community. But as Lovering introduces narrative threads beyond Molly’s, the mystery element of the story rises sharply. Weaving together several distinct timelines—Molly and Jake’s meeting and falling in love in 2013, the paradigm shifts in their evolving relationship, and Molly’s life in high-flying Flynn Cove—Lovering unspools a taut, twisty, humdinger of a plot that encompasses the vagaries of true friendship as well as those of true love.
A slow-burning literary tease that plumbs the heights and depths of young love, creative ambitions, friendship, and betrayal.