This story is written through the eyes of the two main characters, alternating by chapters between the years 2012, and the past, 1991.
Henry comes from a working class family, Margot from a wealthy one. They meet in college, are forced to go their separate ways, and time passes. One day, Henry decides to walk from NYU, where he, a poet, teaches. It’s a lovely day, and Henry is enjoying the beautiful weather, wants to feel the sun shining, wants to enjoy this moment of Spring instead of taking the A train straight to his apartment.
He sees a woman he thinks he recognizes, pauses and waits for her to turn. He looks into her eyes for recognition, and then she disappears into the crowd. Margot. He’s looked for her periodically through the years, wondering how it is possible for someone to disappear in this day and age where this seems impossible. Wondering how he will ever find her again.
“If I Forget You” is slow paced with occasionally lovely prose, some poetic reflections. It is a love story, a variation on star-crossed lovers, no longer young and foolish, whose paths cross. And then, the thoughts, the feelings that come rushing back to them, neither having forgotten the other, but just to see them, if only for a brief moment. The hunger for the rush of that younger love fuels so much, fills so many hours of thought. The hunger to be seen that way once more.
I can’t compare this to Thomas Christopher Greene’s other books, but the writing elevates it, most of the time. There were sections where I felt Greene invested more emotion into, and others where I felt they were written just to get to a different point in the story. Overall, I liked this book from beginning to end, sometimes a lot, occasionally less. There are moments in “If I Forget You” that are memorable.
Publication Date: 14 June 2016
Many thanks to St. Martin's Press, NetGalley and to the author, Thomas Christopher Greene, for providing me with an advanced copy to read.