


It’s not necessary to have read Dickens’ famous novel to appreciate Kingsolver’s absorbing tale, but those who have will savor the tough-minded changes she rings on his Victorian sentimentality while affirming his stinging critique of a heartless society. Inspired by David Copperfield, Kingsolver crafts a 21st-century coming-of-age story set in America’s hard-pressed rural South. She has a knack for crisp, witty summaries, as in her description of a seedy underground gay club that Quentin haunts: “They’d striven for Grecian fantasy and ended up with Greek restaurant.” But the humor doesn’t overwhelm the melancholy heart of the story: At its core, it’s a novel about how love and lovers are easily misinterpreted and how romantic troubles affect friends and family.Ī canny and engrossing rewiring of the big-city romance. And she describes parties, workplaces, apartments, and familial dynamics with impressive sophistication. (Think of Armistead Maupin or Laurie Colwin in a moodier register.) She’s playful with characterization and voice Eleanor’s sections are distinctively written in the first-person, with a young writer’s pitch-perfect brashness and anxiety.

The novel’s somber stretches, wide cast of characters, and cross sections of New York social spheres strongly evoke Hanya Yanagihara’s A Little Life, but Mellors also cultivates a sprightlier style that keeps the novel’s familiar tropes from feeling clichéd or reducing her characters to types. Affairs are considered and/or consummated. Eleanor, a young copywriter at Frank’s firm, is a perceived threat. His fashion-student sister, Zoe, grows reckless, needy, and similarly addictive. Frank’s drinking regresses into alcoholism. Quentin, Cleo’s closest friend, is consumed by a jealousy he sublimates into drugs and sex. Figuring out whether that decision has to do with true love, keeping Cleo in the country, or satisfying other suppressed needs is just one of the storm clouds that soon blow in. Easy banter leads to flirtation, and flirtation speeds to romance within six months, they’re married. On New Year’s Eve 2006, Cleo, a 24-year-old budding British artist, shares an elevator with Frank, a 40-something ad exec. Mellors’ remarkably assured and sensitive debut opens with a meet-cute that’s as charming and frothy as it is misleading. A May-December romance rapidly hits turbulence in early-aughts Manhattan.
