It ends in a cliffhanger again. As I'd read number one long ago, I went back to numbers 2 and 3 to get closer to the events of this one after reading the first page of the fourth. That page should have registered as a red flag. That's because no event will run smoothly in the series. David should have tallied them up quickly and cut his losses. The main character, Maggie and her family (a unit), aren't that gorgeous, genial, intelligent, realistic, practical or benign to make the travail of dating her worth it. If you stay for the conclusion, you'll surely agree. Expect the students to be up to the usual shenanigans. FlisS will ruin everything with jealousy. Expect the insoisance of mature, snob Alice. Expect the sister, Anne, to be snide and insensitive. Expect Scottish men to be brutish. Characters fit their stereotypes and won't change and become self-aware, in general.
One theme of this book is forgiveness. Stan forgives Maggie after she sacrificed her summer for a hospital vigil. The school has forgiven Maggie and David for the train stoppage. The students forgive Fliss.
Another is unfair class differences that result in lifelong disparity between rich and poor. The poor students receive an opportunity to mingle with private school kids as faculty. This is a fantasy romanticized in the book. My educational expert tells me that no smooth sailing and swift overcoming would occur.
I rate this as a slog. Maggie is in her thirties and tied to a family. Her father's behavior towards her uppercrust beau is not to be excused and tolerated and would bode poorly for a future together. Yet, she can't cut the cord. She expects David to visit or live near people who are disrespect and prejudiced. So, each time, he'd be politely defending his choice to be a teacher. Somehow, they miss the big picture that Maggie could marry a classy, rich guy. He's just supposed to forgive such consistent ignorance and be denigrated and humiliated for the entirety of the marriage. This wouldn't do and wouldn't work. Maggie didn't stand up for him by walking out. So forgive the father, forgive David's students' low school performance and behavior, forgive Fliss and Alice, forgive the older, staid English department head and everyone else who behaves badly. Soppy, soppy, soppy. Kudos to anyone who can make it to the end page by page. I failed.