On a chilly day in March of 2020, in the early days of the pandemic, Belle Burden’s husband of twenty years announced, with no prior warning, that he was leaving her. His decision shocked Belle to her she believed he was a happy man, a committed partner, and a devoted father to their three children. She thought he was a man who had settled into the life he had always a successful career, summers spent at their beloved home on Martha’s Vineyard, lots of tennis. Overnight, he transformed from her steady companion into a stranger.
As she pieces her life together in the wake of a loss she had never imagined coming, she finds she is much stronger than she ever expected. Exploring the transformation of a shy, quiet girl, nicknamed ‘Belle the Good’ to a powerful, brave, determined woman who has learned to use her voice to expose the patriarchal structures that have forced women to be discreet and compliant for far too long, Strangers is a must-read memoir of self-discovery.
A couple of years ago, a friend of mine forwarded me an Essay in the New York Times Modern Love Series written by Belle Burden titled Was I Married to a Stranger. This friend raved for months about how affirming and connected to Belle she felt, since she had gone through a similar experience with her former husband. I too loved the article so, of course, I wanted to learn more about Belle’s story when I found out this memoir was being released.
Told with grace and vulnerability, Belle explains how blindsided she felt as her husband cruelly uprooted not only their life after two decades together but also their children’s. Belle describes how she navigated motherhood and other responsibilities while dealing with such devastating heartbreak.
Belle is such a talented author, and I found her debut to be very engrossing. I really enjoyed learning how Belle prioritized her children's emotional well-being during such a tumultuous time. I loved learning how Belle reclaimed her life and identity after the divorce. It also really surprised me to learn that some people in Belle’s circle reacted negatively and critically after her Essay in The Times was published.
I found Strangers to be an inspiring, poignant, and captivating memoir and I would highly recommend it. I listened to the audiobook version which is narrated by the author herself! If you decide to pick this one, I highly recommend this format.
Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage by Belle Burden will be available on January 13. Many thanks to Penguin Random House Audio for the gifted audiobook!
This is a brilliant but, quite frankly, jaw-dropping account of the implosion of Belle Burden's marriage. It took my breath away.
Belle and her husband James had been married for 20 years. Three children, a big daft dog, a summer home and an apartment in the city seemed to signify to Belle that her life was all it could be. But at the start of the pandemic a phone call from another woman's husband explodes everything she believed about her marriage and the man she loved.
The writing in this memoir is superb. Part of me wanted to devour it in one sitting but I forced myself to slow down to take in every part of this marriage's sudden disintegration.
I'll be honest, I was absolutely horrified at the sheer callousness of James. Not only in his actions as he ended the marriage but his coldness towards his wife and children as Belle tries to come to terms with his abandonment (and I don't use that word lightly).
What Belle Burden has written is a touching and honest account of what it is like to find out that the person you think you've known for decades is, in fact, a stranger. It should also serve as a cautionary tale to anyone in any kind of partnership who doesn't keep a weather eye on the finances. As for love - noone can predict what may happen but make sure you read the bank statements.
An excellent memoir. It must have been painful to write. It was certainly hard to read but I would highly recommend it to anyone. I sincerely hope Ms Burden writes more books.
Thankyou to Netgalley and Ebury Publishing, Penguin Random House.
Full reflection on this book now available for free on my Substack. Book Reflection: Strangers by Belle Burden. --- A book that came to me when I needed it most. The parallels between this and my life over the last 6 weeks are uncanny -- in both cases, a man named James walked out of a partnership with no forewarning, explanation, or rationale. So many of these words felt like they were lifted from my own brain. In both cases, Belle Burden and I turned to writing to make sense of the unthinkable (you can read my essay here: My Three Year Relationship Ended with a Text Message).
I think I'll do a dedicated Substack post about this. I'm not sure how to objectively rate it, given how resonant it was with me, but few books have impacted me quite like this.
Whew, this book got me absolutely hooked. In Strangers, Belle Burden writes about how her husband of twenty years announced that he was leaving her out of the blue. One day Burden received a text from her husband’s mistress’s husband, informing her of her husband’s affair. Burden’s husband, referred to as James, initially apologized and said his extramarital affair was over. Then, within 24 hours, he told Burden that their marriage was finished and that he wanted nothing to do with her, their three kids, or their shared homes. In this memoir Burden writes about the devastating impact of her husband’s decision and her process of putting herself back together after their divorce.
First, I want to commend Burden’s writing in Strangers. It gave the vibe of all killer, no filler. So show, and not tell. I was immersed and finished the memoir within 24 hours. It read like a thriller without being salacious or gaudy, like every scene, passage, and detail felt relevant and interesting and juicy without being extra. When James came back to their home to break the news of their divorce to their daughters and literally asked Burden to make him a sandwich in the middle of the divorce reveal, I was *shaken*. So much great characterization and tight writing in this one.
I also loved the emotional maturity in this memoir. Burden writes honestly about her grieving process of her divorce, the impact of her husband’s blindsiding decision, how she fought to care for her kids amidst it all. It was wonderful reading about how she found a way to care for herself and build herself back stronger – her self-growth came across as hard-won and not cliché or overly optimistic. Even though this book is about a specific type of relational ending, I feel like Burden’s growth arc may speak to anyone who’s been through a breakup of any kind that you didn’t want, or even had to go through a difficult life event that you didn’t choose for yourself. I think it’s a sign of a great memoir when the writing is both moving in its specificity and emotionally compelling in how the messages can apply to many different life situations.
Also, yes, Burden is super privileged (she’s a rich, rich white woman) though she acknowledges this and doesn’t skirt away from it. I didn’t expect her to write a manifesto on wealth redistribution (though I suppose it’d be nice if she did engage in wealth redistribution, or something) in the middle of this book because that would’ve removed the focus from the end of her marriage. I can also appreciate the pro-bono immigration legal work she does and how she’s using her social media platform to support that cause, even if that may be a bare minimum for how privileged people should contribute to the world.
I personally think this book would be excellent for book clubs and discussions about marriage and amatonormativity in general. Like, why is marriage even a thing? Why do we celebrate and venerate romantic couplings so much that there’s an entire industry for weddings, married people get tax breaks, etc.? Burden doesn’t delve into these broader structural questions in this memoir – she keeps the lens more on her personal experience, which is fine – though I for one am glad about the candor in which she shares about her divorce. An impressive memoir that genuinely touched and moved me.
(also, on a silly note, the harmonizing Tik Tok trend to Katy Perry’s “Wide Awake” was a *perfect* fit while reading this memoir… and I read it on Valentine’s Day. Iconic of me, tbh)
Are men/people okay?! This was totally engrossing, in part because of the pleasurable voyeurism of peering into the lives of the super-rich, but mostly because of Belle Burden’s total vulnerability and self-disclosure about the sudden implosion of her 20-year marriage. How much do any of us know other people—and perhaps more, importantly, ourselves? It’s a troubling question, and one that is perhaps easy to push under the rug when you find yourself in a seemingly stable relationship or family situation. But Strangers is an account of what happens when you are forced to look directly at the difference and otherness of the people closest to you. That Belle Burden is able to emerge from this ordeal with some level of compassion for and curiosity about her ex-husband is a feat and a testament to her character—but maybe it’s also a product of the clarity and the neat containment that writing can give to even the most harrowing episodes.
harrowing. An unputdownable marriage thriller in the skin of a memoir.
Burden takes us inside the demise of her marriage with grace and takes accountability for the way being married occluded her from pursuing anything else- friendships, work, close relationships with anyone outside of her husband. For twenty years, her husband was the center of her life- until in March 2020, he admitted to having an affair and walked out, leaving her to brave the pandemic and raise their kids alone.
Burden's book needs to be handed to every SAHM and every member of Gen Z clamoring to be a stay at home girlfriend- giving your financial, legal, and personal agency to a man who can walk out and leave you with nothing is a horror movie, not a romcom. Burden acknowledges how blinded by love she was and how foolish it made her, and this needs to be blasted across the airwaves: not knowing how much money is in your bank account isn't something to brag about, it makes you a mark.
Ultimately, I was furious for most of the book, but this is a story of reclaiming one's agency after horror. Burden grows because of this experience, entering the world again, and is stronger for it. Her clear eyed frankness about how blinded she was and her grace when discussing how badly she messed up save this book, but every single word is compelling.
We are all limited by our experiences, but memoirs of the ultra-wealthy often reveal a stunning blindness to their own privilege. In her new memoir, Belle Burden, a middle-aged woman from a pedigreed New York City family—her grandmother was Babe Paley—writes solemnly about her hedge fund husband's sudden departure after 20 years of marriage. In doing so, she inadvertently provides entrée into the very private universe of inherited generational wealth, where discussions of money are considered gauche and verboten. The details accumulate: rambling Manhattan apartments, elite private schools, exclusive boarding schools and Ivy League colleges, trust funds tapped to cover monthly expenses and to purchase outright huge waterfront second homes at the poshest beach locales in the world, high-end decorators, private tennis clubs. Her husband once chided her for never even looking at the restaurant bill before placing her Platinum Amex card on top of the leather folder. Though she tries to humanize herself by discussing her passion for using her law degree for public service, she neglects to mention that only the very wealthiest lawyers can afford to work pro bono while raising three children in Manhattan. Her inculcated elitism is most glaringly revealed when she describes the "tough" childhood experienced by her now ex-husband. Though he and his siblings were afforded costly Manhattan private school educations and resided in a classic seven co-op (no doubt tiny in comparison to her mother's expansive two-story apartment on East End Avenue), they were unable "to afford vacations or dine out." This, to her, constituted hardship. When describing her own mother's childhood as the daughter of Babe Paley and Stanley G. Mortimer, Jr., she writes that the children were housed in a separate cottage on their parents' Long Island estate to be raised by nannies, where their mother would visit only once per month. She attributes this maternal neglect as being common for the era. Is she aware that the vast majority of mothers at that time did not have the luxury of outsourcing the care and raising of their children to hired help in residences separate from the ones in which the parents lived? Perhaps that's what's missing from Belle Burden's memoir—not an apology for extreme privilege, but at least some acknowledgment despite the abrupt and painful end of her marriage- she remains a very, very lucky person. Without that self-awareness, these stories of gilded hardship ring hollow, no matter how elegantly told.
3.75⭐️ rounded up — an emotional memoir about a 20 year marriage that ends abruptly. I thought it was beautifully told with just the right amount of detail and insight.
I'm really surprised by how much love this is getting. It's fine. It's a rich people divorce memoir. But I wouldn't say it's memorable or offers anything new.
received an advanced copy of this book and couldn’t put it down! finished it in a day and can’t wait for the world to read this beautiful and heartbreaking memoir
I'm a memoir fan, and the Joyce Carol Oates blurb sold me.
"It was three months after our first kiss. I felt it all: love, lust, joy, and a letting go of the anxiety, the gripping I’d felt since my father was found dead in his bed. James was here. He had arrived exactly when I needed him. It was the romance my favorite books, my favorite movies, and my family had told me to want and expect— he had swept me off my feet, quickly and completely. And, as he told me often, he was going to take care of me. The fatherless girl had found her knight." p45
Final Review
(thoughts & recs) Honestly, I don't think I was the right audience for this. I don't doubt for a second that this author was miserable during her divorce, but she didn't communicate her emotions well. It's reads more like a play-by-play than a memoir of being turned inside out by relational rupture.
She makes a half-hearted effort to acknowledge her vast privilege at the beginning of the book. But this signal was overwritten by later material with mismatching tone, such as name-dropping.
For fans of memoir and books about marriage and divorce.
My Favorite Things:
✔️ This author talks about her experiences with Covid, during which she enjoyed dramatic privilege. She at least acknowledges it, but it's a bit difficult to relate. *edit Well that was short lived because there are some experiences that are universal despite privelege. Like losing trust in someone you love. I'm sort of hooked now.
✔️ I like the sections on the author's father. Her love and respect for him are palpable. At the same time, I think the story here is pretty quotidian and it might only be because of her father that this book was ever picked up for publication.
✔️ "...I was too shy, too lacking in confidence. I needed men to pursue me, to be serious and certain . And when the relationship had run its course, I was always too afraid to break it off. The prospect of hurting someone’s feelings paralyzed me. I had been in love with my college boyfriends but never with this one. He had somehow ended up there, in my life, on my couch, and I didn’t know how to get myself out of it." p40 I know this feeling, of being too passive to advocate for my best interests. Certain members of the population are socialized to disappear into their space-making for others who are more valued by society.
✔️ "Osprey couples mate within days of meeting, producing two to four eggs. The female “broods” the eggs, warming them, caring for them. The male continues to gather material for the nest, delivering it back to the female. He hunts to sustain them, always fresh fish— trout, bluefish, menhaden." p74 I really enjoy how Burden works the story of the ospreys into the story of her marriage. It's interesting and an effective metaphor.
Content Notes: divorce, marital strife, cheating, pandemic, Covid, shut down, financial struggle, professional misfit, crisis of conscience, loss of a parent, financial abuse, wild animals,
Thank you to Belle Burden, The Dial Press, and NetGalley for an accessible digital arc of STRANGERS. All views are mine.
i tore through this within a day, while running after my toddler. it far exceeded my expectations. Burden’s writing is vulnerable and gut-wrenching, and more poetic than i expected. i liked the beautiful descriptions of the ospreys, which felt apt without beating readers over the head with metaphor.
i appreciate that she doesn’t hide her obvious privilege and checks herself quite a few times, in an authentic way. (as an aside, i happened to learn a lot about the wealthy and old moneyed circles, and cant say i envy the women in them.) i don’t normally read memoir - ironic, i know! - but was compelled by this one and im so glad i was.
putting this book out was an act of courage and self-reclamation; i am inspired by so much of it, even in light of Burden’s enormous privileges. i hope she continues to write while balancing her much-needed pro bono immigration practice.
Keeping with my previous tradition of not rating memoirs, I shan’t rate this one but I thought it was excellent.
I listened to the audio and thought Belle was a great narrator. There were moments when the emotions of what she was reading/reliving really shone through. This was heartbreaking to read: listening to what she thought was a solid marriage to a person she has loved and built a life with for 20 years become a stranger overnight. I appreciate how candid she was in this memoir. She acknowledges her background of privilege and her naïveté in some aspects of her marriage. While I would become frustrated sometimes at her consideration and grace towards her husband, I can understand why she would act that way. She explains why she did, how she still was in love with him and he is obviously the father of her children. She didn’t want to be nasty in front of them and hoped she would receive kindness back. This is a great story for all women and femmes to read, especially if you are a stay at home wife/partner or mother.
It feels weird to say that I’m proud of a stranger but I am. I’m glad that she wrote the article and then this memoir. I was not surprised but still disgusted by the people in her life who judged her along this journey of divorce and writing her story, when she was the one wronged by her ex husband!
At first, I was very sympathetic about the situation but after a while, it became difficult to maintain due to the continued attention and credit that she gave her ex. His changing of the pre-nup should have been a red flag in the first place and she was told that. Multiple times. By multiple trusted sources. Not clocking the whole financial picture, coming from her family's level of financial privilege? Wild. Continuing to send your kids to boarding school despite losing your breadwinner and while losing sleep being worried about money? On the same pages used to tell me how worried she was about them, as they slept over at school? Even more wild. (As a public school teacher, it is incumbent upon me to note that excellent public schools exist near *both* of her rarified zip codes)
I finished it because I bought it, but I regret it. At least I only lost a couple of hours and 99 cents on an Audible promotion, but it did manage to inoculate me from believing any further NYT book recs, so by that measure, it was worth it. 🫡
I didn't expect to love this. A memoir of divorce really doesn't sound like my thing. I also did not expect to feel real affinity with Burden's ex-husband (I say this in full acknowledgement that he is a person who did terrible things -- but is not only that). I left my spouse after what I saw as years of unhappiness and increasing distance, and what he saw as contentment -- I did not share how I was feeling, I left signs and expected him to read them, and it took me years to realize he had not and did not wish to. That is on me. My spouse begged me to try and heal things, but by the time I left I was done, broken, and there was no going back. (Unlike Burden's husband, I left everything with my spouse; I took nothing, left broke, I just wanted to be free.) A quarter century later this book taught me something about myself and my behavior in intimate relationships. Burden goes deep and presents things well. She must have been a really good lawyer.
Burden deconstructs her marriage after her husband leaves her with no warning, and in doing so she deconstructs marriage. The takeaway here is that communication matters, that in sparing others we are only avoiding conflict, eliminating the possibility of resolution and release, and putting both ourselves and our partners at risk of the whole exploding. This is beautifully crafted, searingly honest, and wholly relatable (at least for me.)
Heartbreaking and, painfully but truly, heart rebuilding.
I had read the “Modern Love” essay that Ms. Burden wrote, and looked forward to this memoir. It arrived on my Kindle at midnight, January 13. I began reading it early the 14th (today), and just finished it. If “James” were here in our family room, I would be tempted to slap him across the face. And not just once. Reading his insistence on changing the pre-nup right before the wedding 21 years earlier, to favor him financially in the event of divorce, I thought, UH-OH. And my fears were confirmed. I do fervently hope that the money Belle Burden makes from this book is in the many millions. She deserves it, and more. She chose her family over a slick, evil adulterer. I also ordered this book for my BFF, who is a retired therapist. I said, “I need a diagnosis of the man in this book.” So a copy is winging its way to her. But to Belle Burden, I say, “Please hang in there. Sorry to say, the pain will last for years. But the love of your children will fill your heart, over and over, as will the love from your extended family and the immigrants you help.” Please keep writing. As the author of 16 published novels, I have learned that there are many “Gregs” in this world. They are out there, and they are unfailingly cruel. Please ignore them, and know that you have many fans who will stick with you. I am one. —Diane Mott Davidson
torn on how I feel about this - a well written and raw account of a painful unraveling, I struggled to wrap my mind around why this rich white woman’s story was uniquely deserving of so much NYT coverage, and why I played into it by reading it.
i can't even begin to describe the nine levels of hell that this book put me through. strangers by belle burden tells the, quite frankly, harrowing tale of how burden's marriage of twenty years—you read that right, twenty goddamn years!!!—dissolved in the blink of an eye. it's propulsive, beautifully written, and it doesn't shy away from the difficulties that burden faced after her husband walked out of her life.
as a devout misandrist, i am no stranger to hearing about and/or witnessing firsthand the broad spectrum of men's bad behaviour. but there was something especially cruel about the way that burden's ex-husband abandoned her and their family. reading this memoir filled me with so much rage, i had to quash the urge to throw my kindle across the room. belle is so much better than me, because if i was the one dealing with all that heartbreak and betrayal, you hoes would've seen me on the national news.
i have two things to say. one: i do firmly believe that we should wipe all men from the face of the planet. and two: i am so fucking glad that belle didn't let shame and grief keep her trapped in the generational cycle of silence that so many women fall victim to. as women, we are always expected to understand and forgive men, to be quiet and graceful, to let bad behaviour slide instead of calling it out. there's this pesky notion that claims if your partner cheats on you, it must be because of something that you did. maybe you weren't pretty enough, or smart enough, so he had to go find these qualities in someone else. maybe if you had done something differently, you would've been able to keep your man loyal.
what a load of horseshit. 🥱
it was so refreshing to see belle refuse to subscribe to this assumption; even though i don't know her personally, by the end of this book, i felt so proud of her. i hope that her decision to share her story resonates with anyone else who has gone through a similar type of heartbreak. being discarded in such a callous way is always a devastating experience, but i think this memoir serves as proof that you can come out the other side stronger, surer, and even better than you were before.
I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily. Absolutely loved this memoir and could not stop myself from consuming it in one sitting. It almost reads like a beautifully poetic literary fiction, so much so that I had to remind myself it actually is a memoir. This takes you from the day of the discovery through the dissolution of a marriage and what comes after. It is written so beautifully in a way that sets it apart from other memoirs. I felt like I actually walked this journey with the author the entire time. With vivid descriptions of her emotions in the aftermath of what happened, I was in my feels. There’s no wild salacious drama in this memoir which is what it makes it so relatable for so many of us.
A gut-wrenching memoir of marriage told without bitterness, resentment, or self-pity. My eyes roll at the haters who dismiss Belle Burden as too wealthy and privileged to show admirable strength in the face of adversity. I’m impressed by her self-knowledge and moved by her vulnerability.
This poetic, raw, and poignant memoir captures the shattering impact on a wife's life when, out of the blue, her husband asks for a divorce. Could hardly read through my tears but could not put it down due to its transformative message of hope. Wow!
I have very mixed feelings about this book. I did enjoy reading it, it certainly kept my attention, but in some other way i found it boring. It’s a story thousands of women could write, it is not that unique. Thanks to Netgalley for giving me the chance to read this.
Belle Burden’s memoir is a wealthy person’s reflection on the lived experience of marriage, family, and divorce. This is a carefully crafted story. Remember, one never knows what a life or a marriage is like based on the version that a person presents. We take Belle’s word that her marriage was fine, yet her husband split without explanation. I very much doubt her marriage was fine.
Belle comes from an illustrious family. She lives in a wealthy, privileged world, in upper Manhattan, in a large luxurious apartment, and also in a vacation home, an estate on Martha’s Vineyard. She is the kind of woman who hires a decorator. She is the kind of woman who marries a man who goes on to become a hedge fund manager.
Belle does not work. She spends her time walking, running, and at a country club during the “season” on Martha’s Vineyard. She accepts occasional pro bono immigration legal work, but has been unemployed and focused on being a good mother to three teen-aged children (since the first one was born, 18 years before) and a wife, while holding down the fort for a mostly absent husband. She has not paid attention to their finances. He is always working. She has been married for 21 years to this hedge fund manager when the tale begins. Then he leaves.
The hedge fund manager has left her for another woman and as the divorce proceeds, we see he has taken earlier steps to cheat her financially. Then, there is the troubling issue of the prenup. Apparently the prenup will hurt her.
It seems that her husband‘s behavior has been the first real insult in Belle’s privileged life. She describes suffering from a loss of status. Belle has enjoyed very high status her whole life, until now.
When her community comes to understand that the hedge fund manager has left her, people start gossiping. She is considered a less valuable country club member because she is a 50 year old woman whose husband no longer desires her. Some people take his side. Others imply that the split was her fault. Some people are kind towards her and others are vicious.
Her husband having an affair, leaving her during Covid lockdown without explanation, refusing therapy, refusing to talk, it all hurts her. She no longer has any control over what he thinks or does. He has refused formal visitation rights with his children, the youngest 12. He will invite the children to the occasional dinner out on the occasional Thursday night dinner.
Belle’s monkey mind wanders. She wonders if the divorce is her fault, she suspects she is unlovable. She worries what the neighbors think. Was she too fat?
Belle Burden has written a clear and poignant memoir about the lived experience of grief and mourning after a husband leaves a 20 year marriage with no explanation. The reader never knows what the marriage was about in the first place, from beginning to end. One questions the implicit underpinnings of their marriage.
The story highlights Belle’s experience of devastation, humiliation, and confusion through the loss of a spouse who won’t communicate. She slowly picks up the pieces of her life. She realizes that outside the marriage she is free to express herself more fully and be a different person.
Belle would like you to believe that her life has something to do with your life. Don’t be fooled. If you work or if you are middle class or if you didn’t inherit millions or if you don’t have a summer vacation home and if you don’t belong to a country club, if you didn’t go to an ivy league school, then you have little in common with her, even if you have felt the same emotions and had the same thoughts when your husband left you and the kids. Or if you ever lost control of a partner who wouldn’t stay just because you wanted it. This is a voyeuristic and sympathetic romp through an ultra wealthy person’s life.
I feel terrible rating anyone’s memoir so low but… it’s just unrelatable to me and so many other people in this day and age. Rich people divorce. Oh no, I might have to sell one of my two homes in some of the most exclusive zip codes in the country. People are gossiping about me at the country club. Who will pay for the children’s exorbitant private boarding school tuitions?
I wanted this to be something other than it was, I suppose. At points, the author acknowledges her privilege, as she should.
Heart-wrenching, devastating, and triumphant - Belle Burden's memoir "Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage" was a beautifully crafted work that I was surprisingly drawn into, despite the fact that I had never been married before.
Shortly after the beginning of the COVID-19 Pandemic, Belle and her husband of over two decades are quarantined in their summer home at Martha's Vineyard with their three children when James delivers life-changing news: he's fallen in love with another woman and promptly leaves his family behind, returning back to Manhattan to continue the affair. In the days that follow, Belle attempts to make sense of this complete upheaval, looking back on their decades-long relationship, meeting and falling in love at a law firm in NYC and the countless memories and emotions that she holds from the years that follow. She questions herself - What did she miss? What did she do wrong? - while simultaneously trying to maintain structure for her children and understand how and when do break this news to them.
While this memoir is called a Memoir of Marriage, it's so much more. Belle dives into her and her ex-husband's backgrounds, noting how their own childhoods and family experiences shaped them into adulthood. She recalls their early years with love and fondness, painting a man who was loving, supportive, and kind - yet had his own demons and insecurities he battled with in secret. And she lays out the painful and difficult time that follows, including the legal consequences of divorce and the contentious separation of assets; the social repercussions she had to face when friends and acquaintances inevitably heard the news and inevitably chose a side or narrative to believe; and her own personal physical recovery, including diving back into writing as an opportunity to take back her voice and story. It is one woman's personal story and triumph, but also sheds a clear and glaring light at the misogyny and sexism still present today, at the immediate doubt cast on women and the expectation that they will bear the brunt of giving grace and forgiveness even when it's uncalled for.
The writing is enthralling, emotionally intricate and contemplative, which made it easy to finish this book within a day. I highly recommend "Strangers: A Memoir of Marriage" to anyone who has an opportunity to read it once it's published in January 2026!
When half of all marriages end in divorce, why are we surprised when it happens to us? This book is a well-crafted tale of someone completely blindsided by her husband leaving her, and it was quite believable that she was surprised. She was pretty naive. What stunned me was how her husband just severed the relationship with their three school age children. Like he turned a page and that was it. As a divorced person with children, I really kept wondering what kind of person would do that - an apparently lots do. The book has many cautionary tales, and one of them is that if you are in a monoculture, you cannot disrupt it. She traveled in circles of basically all wealthy, white, married women with families. It takes a lot of control to maintain that kind of community. She was surprised that they didn't embrace her.
Reading this as a daughter who quite vividly remembers walking through her parents divorce was an interesting and rather moving experience. Belle writes incredibly well and sums up her life and what feels to be its end so succinctly yet poignantly. I feel a peculiar sort of hollowness in my gut; as Carrie said, “Things are good now. But I wish I was little again.”
Beautifully written and deeply honest, this memoir pulls you right into the heart of a complicated, emotional story. Belle Burden writes with such vulnerability and clarity that you can feel every high and low as if you were living it alongside her.
It’s raw and reflective but also full of moments that make you pause and really think about love, marriage, and identity. One of those memoirs that lingers in your mind long after you finish.
3,5 Impressive and compelling, but in the end it got a bit repetative and it could maybe have been a bit shorter. Thank you Penguin random House UK and Netgalley UK for the ARC.