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Aos 22 anos, Lotto e Mathilde são jovens, perdidamente apaixonados e destinados ao sucesso. Eles se conhecem nos últimos meses da faculdade e antes da formatura já estão casados. Seguem-se anos difíceis, mas românticos: reuniões com amigos no apartamento em Manhattan; uma carreira que ainda não paga as contas; uma casa onde só cabem felicidade e sexo bom. Uma década depois, o caminho tornou-se mais sólido. Ele é um dramaturgo famoso e ela se dedica integralmente ao sucesso do marido. A vida dos dois é invejada como a verdadeira definição de parceria bem-sucedida.
Porém, nem tudo é o que parece; toda história tem dois lados, e em um casamento essa máxima se faz ainda mais verdadeira. Se em “Destinos” somos seduzidos pela imagem do casal perfeito, em “Fúrias” a tempestuosa raiva de Mathilde se revela fervendo sob a superfície. Em uma reviravolta emocionalmente complexa, o que começou como uma ode a uma união extraordinária se torna muito mais.
Com profundidade e um emaranhado de tramas, a prosa vibrante e original de Destinos e fúrias comove, provoca e surpreende. Um romance sobre os muitos casamentos possíveis entre o amor, a arte e o poder e sobre os diferentes pontos de vista pelos quais essas combinações podem ser enxergadas.
Romance finalista do National Book Award de 2015 e do Kirkus Prize, eleito livro do ano pela Amazon e diversos veículos de imprensa, entre eles The Washington Post, Time, Slate e Kirkus Reviews.
“Lauren Groff rasga as costuras de um casamento aparentemente perfeito.”Vanity Fair
“Uma leitura instigante que questiona se o amor pode ser verdadeiro mesmo quando envolto em falsidade.”People
“É impossível não se deixar fascinar pelo que pode estar acontecendo a portas fechadas, especialmente se o que há do outro lado é um casal glamoroso e loucamente apaixonado.”Marie Claire
494 pages, Kindle Edition
First published September 15, 2015
Between his skin and hers, there was the smallest of spaces, barely enough for air, for this slick of sweat now chilling. Even still, a third person, their marriage, had slid in.
He would have liked to go deeper into her, to seat himself on the seat of her lacrimal bone and ride there, tiny homunculus like a rodeo cowboy, understand what it was she thought.
He imagined a lifetime of screwing on the beach until they were one of those ancient pairs speed-walking in the morning, skin like lacquered walnut meat. Even old, he would waltz her into the dunes and have his way with her sexy frail bird bones, the plastic hips, the bionic knee.
Her mother had smelled of cold and scales, her father of stone dust and dog. She imagined her husband’s mother, whom she had never met, had a whiff of rotting apples, although her stationery had stunk of baby powder and rose perfume. Sallie was starch, cedar. Her dead grandmother, sandalwood. Her uncle, Swiss cheese. People told her she smiled like garlic, like chalk, like nothing at all. Lotto, clean as camphor at his neck and belly, like electrified pennies at the armpit, like chlorine at the groin.
Great swaths of her life were white space to her husband. What she did not tell him balanced neatly with what she did. Still, there are untruths made of words and untruths made of silences, and Mathilde had only ever lied to Lotto in what she never said.
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"Marriage is made of lies; kind ones, mostly. Omissions. If you give voice to the things you think every day about your spouse, you'd crush them to paste. She never lied, just never said."The difficulty in reviewing this novel is avoiding disclosure of too much of the plot or structure. That, I have learned that many Goodreads friends bungled the bullocks on this novel. I still got nuttin but love for 'em.
Great swaths of her life were white space to her husband. What she did not tell him balanced neatly with what she did. Still, there are untruths made of words and untruths made of silences, and Mathilde had only ever lied to Lotto in what she never said.Literary fiction often seems to generate mixed reviews on Goodreads. I don't read a lot of it myself, and have given my share of negative reviews to these books too.
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Women in narratives were always defined by their relations.
“It occurred to her then that life was conical in shape, the past broadening beyond the sharp point of the lived moment. The more life you had, the more the base expanded, so that the wounds and treasons that were nearly imperceptible when they happened stretched like tiny dots on a balloon slowly blown up. A speck on the slender child grows into a gross deformity in the adult, inescapable, ragged at the edges.”
Great swaths of her life were white space to her husband. What she did not tell him balanced neatly with what she did. Still, there are untruths made of words and untruths made of silence, and Mathilde had only ever life to Lotto in what she never said."