Today I finished one of those books I will never forget. It won't be a book for everyone. It's not a fun, quick read, not a beach book. It is quite literary, lush and dense and so thought provoking. There are references to mythology, mysticism, Nelson Mandela, race relations, life in Africa, love, loss, death and longing. The book is called, "Discretion" and is written by Elizabeth Nunoz, a writer of great skill and education. She is a teacher at CUNY and has received many awards. She is originally from Trinidad, but was educated in the US. This is the story of an African man, displaced from his country as a boy, when his father let the missionaries take him away. He becomes a dignitary, and an Ambassador, and is given a woman to marry by the President of his African nation. He loves the woman, and they move to DC. and begin to raise a family. He hears the name Marguerite one day, from the wife of a fellow dignitary, and realizes he must meet the woman who holds that name. He travels to NYC and meets Marguerite through the friend who introduced the name in conversation at the party, earlier in DC. There is instant love between the two, a love so intense it, literally, lasts a lifetime. They yearn for one another over many decades, even though separated by oceans and continents. He feels he is married to both women, and isn't that the way of his forefathers? These are all well educated, respected characters, all lost in a web of love and deceit. They are good people, well meaning, and this man loves his wife, but loves his Marguerite as well. Does his wife know about Marguerite? Is it enough to know her husband will never leave her? Does she wonder what he does on all those trips to NYC, and why he comes home so troubled and suffering from nightmares which cause him to wake screaming, heart pounding? Could love be what is causing this? It's a fascinating book about morals, love, devotion, truth, lies, retribution and humanity. There is so much grief to bear, and yet so much joy to embrace. It is one of those rare literary novels that was experienced, not read! The times in which it was set were fascinating times in history, from the 50's until the time when Mandela was set free. Events play out which many of us remember, if only as pieces heard on the nightly news. I will always wonder how life played out for these characters after the book ended. They still had many years ahead of them, since they are in their 50's when the last page comes to an end. I became so involved in their stories, that I may actually write to the author to ask her how SHE envisioned their futures.