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Unforgivable Love: A Retelling of Dangerous Liaisons

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In this vivid reimagining of the French classic Les Liaisons Dangereuses, it’s the summer when Jackie Robinson breaks Major League Baseball’s color barrier and a sweltering stretch has Harlem’s elite fleeing the city for Westchester County’s breezier climes. But there two predators stalk amidst the manicured gardens and fine old homes.

Heiress Mae Malveaux rules society with an angel’s smile and a heart of stone. She made up her mind long ago that nobody would decide her fate. To have the pleasure she craves, control is paramount, especially control of the men Mae attracts like moths to a flame.

Valiant Jackson always gets what he wants—and he’s wanted Mae for years. The door finally opens for him when Mae strikes a bargain: seduce her virginal young cousin, Cecily, who is engaged to Frank Washington. Frank values her innocence above all else. If successful, Val’s reward will be a night with Mae.

But Val secretly seeks another prize. Elizabeth Townsend is fiercely loyal to her church and her civil rights attorney husband. Certain there is something redeemable in Mr. Jackson. Little does she know that her most unforgivable mistake will be Val’s greatest triumph.

544 pages, Kindle Edition

First published September 26, 2017

71 people are currently reading
1978 people want to read

About the author

Sophfronia Scott

14 books378 followers
Sophfronia Scott is a novelist, essayist, and leading contemplative thinker whose work has received a 2020 Artist Fellowship Grant from the Connecticut Office of the Arts. Her book The Seeker and the Monk: Everyday Conversations with Thomas Merton won the 2021 Thomas Merton “Louie” Award from the International Thomas Merton Society. She holds a BA in English from Harvard and an MFA in writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts.

Sophfronia began her career as an award-winning magazine journalist for Time, where she co-authored the groundbreaking cover story “Twentysomething,” the first study identifying the demographic group known as Generation X, and People. When her first novel, All I Need to Get By, was published by St. Martin’s Press in 2004 Sophfronia was nominated for best new author at the African American Literary Awards and hailed by Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr. as “potentially one of the best writers of her generation.”

Her latest book is Wild, Beautiful, and Free, a historical novel set during the Civil War. Sophfronia’s other books include Unforgivable Love, Love’s Long Line, Doing Business By the Book, and This Child of Faith: Raising a Spiritual Child in a Secular World, co-written with her son Tain. Her essays, short stories, and articles have appeared in numerous publications including Yankee Magazine, The Christian Century, North American Review, NewYorkTimes.com, and O, The Oprah Magazine. Her essays “Hope On Any Given Day,” “The Legs On Which I Move,” and “Why I Didn’t Go to the Firehouse” are listed among the Notables in the Best American Essays series.

Sophfronia has taught at Regis University’s Mile High MFA and Bay Path University’s MFA in Creative Nonfiction. She is currently the director of Alma College’s MFA in Creative Writing, a low-residency graduate program based in Alma, Michigan. Sophfronia lives in Sandy Hook, Connecticut.


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Displaying 1 - 30 of 108 reviews
Profile Image for Ann Marie (Lit·Wit·Wine·Dine).
200 reviews268 followers
October 10, 2017
I'm running a giveaway for this book through 11:59pm EST 10/13/17. Enter here!
You can read this and all of my reviews at Lit·Wit·Wine·Dine.

Though I have never read the original version of Dangerous Liaisons or even seen a film or theater adaptation, I was intrigued by this book’s description and couldn’t wait to receive my copy. I was not disappointed.

If you’ve been following my reviews for any length of time, you probably know that I rarely go all-out fan girl. This is one of these very rare times that I really, really want to! Part of me just want to GIF the heck out of this review and gush with abandon. However, I think this book deserves much more consideration than a buy it, read it, download it now rant (that I am giving you here ever so subtly and subliminally anyway).

WHAT WORKED:

Atmosphere – This is a very atmospheric novel. Whether in Harlem, Westchester, or North Carolina, the settings are vividly described in such a way that the reader truly feels transported.

Characters – The characters become real via a combination of narrative, conversations, letters, and even body language. It is obvious that the author has given much thought to the development of each character. This is an especially impressive accomplishment given the number of characters that are central to the plot. They were not all likable, of course. But whether chaste and naive or cruel and calculating, they were realistically flawed and multi-dimensional.

The Plot – I loved everything about the story. It provided all of the timeless elements we, as readers, can’t get enough of. Take a little bit of lust, a little bit of revenge, and a lot of manipulation. Add a sprinkle of sex, a dash of lust, a pinch of jealousy. Put it over a low, slow fire till it’s just about ready to burn then sprinkle the top with a mix of lies and secrets. It’s like that!

(I know you might be asking yourself if I’ve suffered a head injury. I don’t even like reading books with sex and romance. This is different, I swear. It’s not overdone. It’s not gratuitous. It’s all very relatable and realistic. None of this flowery “he brushed the soft curve of my ample bosom” stuff!)

While the plot is complex and weighty, it’s easy to follow and definitely drew me in fast. It’s the kind of book that’s both a page-turner and something that you want to savor.

The Feels Unforgivable Love: A Retelling of Dangerous Liaisons is a beautifully written story that made me experience the full gamut of human emotions without being trite or sappy.

The Ending – Maybe I should have seen it coming. I didn’t.

WHAT DIDN’T WORK

I really don’t have anything to add here. I had no real issues with any of the elements of this book.

THE BOTTOM LINE

Sophfronia Scott has written a sexy, smart, atmospheric novel that transports the reader to the glitz, grit, and glamour of 1940’s Harlem. Though I hadn’t read her first novel, All I Need to Get By, I will be looking forward to reading her future novels.
Profile Image for karen.
4,012 reviews172k followers
Want to read
February 12, 2018
what's unforgivable is that no one told me this book was a thing i could have.

Profile Image for Sophfronia Scott.
Author 14 books378 followers
October 21, 2017
This is my work of historical fiction and I'm grateful for all who take it up. Hope you enjoy it. :-)
Profile Image for Gaele.
4,076 reviews85 followers
October 2, 2017
Pierre de Laclos’s original Les Liaisons Dangereuses and the machinations and struggles for power, position and upward mobility, full of sex, rumor and backbiting were emblematic of the courts of many European Kings - the real inspiration of modern day Survivor-like reality shows. Sophfronia Scott has modernized this story by a century plus, and changed the setting to 1940's Harlem, adding a wonderful twist to the best and worst intentions of us all as we struggle for that lasting place in society.

Initially drawn to the story for the unique perspective brought from Scott: post war 1940’s Harlem with all of the changes in society, the solid ‘community’ feel that is at once both wholly American and distinctly from the perspective of those marginalized by the greater society at large, and their building of a world that is at once separate and distinct from, yet reliant upon that greater society. And one that provided a constant source of fascination and intrigue for those outside that Harlem bubble. And we do have time to move from that bubble with country visits to family outside the city, time spent in North Carolina.

In this story, Scott introduces us to several characters, all revealed in 3rd person past tense in alternating chapters. Each character is highly nuanced, bringing with them their own agendas, likes, dislikes and proclivities. These are not the average people on the street, they are the Harlem elite: wealthy, powerful movers and shakers in that society, and each has multiple opportunities to affect their own lives and those of the people around them in varying ways. Full of plots and schemes to gain or increase their personal power, wealth and standing: each brings a series of motivations to the table which come clear as their stories continue. Reasons are not always what one may think – but results – that alpha-dog position in pack, is the ultimate goal here. And you can’t help but be swept away with the plots, comparing and contrasting the perspectives to those you know or have seen before. Then, you realize that while the essential humanness of these people is undeniable and it becomes their setting and time that makes them different from those you know.

Scott’s writing, a cross between lyrical and wholly descriptive puts you right in the streets and drawing rooms: listening to the music that winds through the daily life: conversations have their own particular rhythm and metre, with a touch of that be-bop flair in some, more fluid and haunting to remind you of Ella. Each moment, from description to sound becomes the background as you read on, and at over 500 pages, the read is one that will transport you to another time and place, keeping you cheering and jeering as things unfold and the tangles of relationships, motivations, prejudices and unrequited desires unravel. So many tangles in the story – what is versus what could / should be, the unacknowledged desires, long held ill feelings and even some that never quite untangle are prevalent, and make this a story well worth having on your shelf and read often.

I received an eArc copy of the title from the publisher via Edelweiss for purpose of honest review. I was not compensated for this review: all conclusions are my own responsibility.

Review first appeared at I am, Indeed
Profile Image for Melanie.
560 reviews276 followers
Read
February 8, 2019
Much like the classic it is based on, I just could not get on with this book. I find it very difficult to read about people who deliberately ruin other's people's lives at the moment and I never liked the original for the same reason.
Profile Image for Colleen Foster.
125 reviews130 followers
Read
March 27, 2021
I have never read a book by this author, so I was excited to see what this book was about. Whoa, let me tell you I wasn't expecting this book to be as good as it was. This book has you thinking about life and the games that people play. But trust me the end doesn't happen like I thought it would.
Profile Image for Erica Sullivan.
1 review7 followers
April 25, 2017
Unforgivable Love A Retelling of Dangerous Liaisons by Sophfronia Scott Sophfronia Scott has created a truly inspiring retelling of the 18th century novel -Dangerous Liaisons. Never sacrificing the heart of the story, Sophfronia has brilliantly unraveled the deeply woven and intricate relationships between the main characters set in 1940’s Harlem. She has seamlessly elevated the complexities of the human condition through thoughtful study of the main characters and their own personal journey of disparity, deceit, corruption, cynicism, love, hope and ultimately personal redemption. Unforgivable Love is a page turner that does not disappoint!!
Profile Image for Kathy.
Author 21 books314 followers
September 27, 2017
I felt so lucky to receive this novel as a Goodreads Giveaway. What a sexy, compelling, powerful, deeply absorbing read. I love Sophronia Scott's writing. Everything: time, place, characters, was so vivid to me because of her gifted storytelling, a winning combination of precision and lyricism. I won't summarize the plot of the book here as other reviewers already have. You don't need to have read Dangerous Liaisons to love this novel. I had, but that fell to the background as I read. Suffice it to say, I highly recommend this novel and look forward to reading all of Scott's future books of which I hope there will be many.
Profile Image for Just A Girl With Spirit.
1,404 reviews13.3k followers
August 8, 2023
How crazy is it that I’ve never watched Dangerous Liaisons that this book apparently is a retelling of, but now I feel I must watch it! This story was a trip. Set in 1940’s Harlem, it explores corruption, manipulation, deceit all for the sake of a game and trying to destroy other people. I listened to the audio and enjoyed it very much.
Profile Image for Monica **can't read fast enough**.
1,033 reviews372 followers
February 21, 2019
I read this one as part of the #ReadSoulLit reading for 2019.

Really enjoyable retelling. Nicely written, atmospheric, with characters that are really well developed. I especially liked they way Scott made all of the character's secrets, desires, and weaknesses so interconnected, that the way the story unfolds seemed inevitable.

I enjoyed this one so much that I am going to order All I Need to Get By. It sounds like a page turner too.

Where you can find me:
•(♥).•*Monlatable Book Reviews*•.(♥)•
Twitter: @MonlatReader
Instagram: @readermonica
Facebook: Monica Reeds
Goodreads Group: The Black Bookcase
Profile Image for Antonia.
138 reviews39 followers
January 2, 2023
AGH! A book I wish I could read again for the first time. So much drama and love and uncertainty but with a Black cast of characters in 1940s Harlem.
Profile Image for Breena.
Author 10 books80 followers
June 13, 2017
"Unforgivable Love" by Sophfronia Scott, a retelling of the classic, "Dangerous Liaisons," is a sexy summer's intrigue in the world of fashionable members of African-American high society in Jazz Age Harlem, New York. Scott's novel is a panoramic exploration of universal themes of love, sex, and social intrigue. "Unforgivable Love" offers a delightful opportunity to spend time in Harlem discovering this exciting, historical time and place.
Profile Image for Carla Suto.
902 reviews85 followers
October 9, 2017
UNFORGIVABLE LOVE by Sophfronia Scott is an intriguing retelling of the French classic, "Les Liaisons Dangereuses” (Dangerous Liaisons) set in the world of high-society African-American culture during the late 1940s in Harlem, New York. The author has created complex characters with carefully interwoven relationships. She brings to life themes of love, friendship, greed, revenge, class and morality in this suspenseful and absorbing story. Through the author’s rich and visual narrative, the reader is drawn completely into the time period and setting. The plot takes a few unexpected twists and turns as the story reaches its dramatic conclusion. I really enjoyed the unique perspective of the re-imagining of this classic book. I am thankful to have won a copy of this book in a Goodreads giveaway.
Profile Image for DJ Sakata.
3,305 reviews1,779 followers
October 14, 2017
Favorite Quotes:

Mae was vigilant about her expressions. She learned long ago the faces she wore would always be more essential than any dress she put on…

The gals around here look at me cross-eyed like you’re doing now, but I say get you a second husband if you can manage it. You mark my words! You don’t know what I’m talking about now but you’ll see when you’ve got that first one and you’re done with him.

Cecily felt like she had entered a different time frame where, no matter how hard she tried to catch up, she seemed to be always five seconds behind. She was still processing Aunt Pearl’s words but Aunt Pearl was already on the porch steps.

Cecily didn’t like the dark and this dark outside her window was beyond what she thought possible. It was black like the darkness of a hole that wasn’t satisfied with just being a hole so it had to suck you in and make you part of the darkness.

There are people in this world who can never get other people to love them the way they want to be loved. It’s like they spend their whole lives on their knees in the dirt in the woods trying to light a wet match. Can’t spark nothing. The more they can’t, the more they want to burn the whole forest to the ground.

My Review:

Despite the superb quality of the writing, I struggled some with this intriguing story as it was intense and so very, very long – 528 pages long.   I can happily say it was well worth the effort and I will now crow with knowledge and awareness of the tale. Sophfronia Scott’s writing was brilliant and held me captive in the corners of rooms with her compelling characters – I was like a voyeur - sometimes cringing, flinching, gasping, or biting my cheek. Ms. Scott nimbly captured the confusing transitions and personal shifts in awareness of the tumultuous period of coming of age with great sensitivity and her cunning insights were expertly tailored to each character. Her writing was fluid and agile, even when depicting the cruel machinations and underpinnings of the stealthy Mae or the heartbreaking results of her vicious maneuvering. Ms. Scott’s scenes and characters were vibrant and vividly detailed, yet the main players were despicable and loathsome creatures – they were contemptible, vile, and manipulative schemers. While captivated and repulsed, I was also remained fully engaged, totally invested, and compelled to see it through to the conclusion while holding my breath that karma would balance out. 
Profile Image for Nancy.
311 reviews
July 7, 2017
Ms. Scott's novel is faithful to Dangerous Liasons, but it is so much more than that. At first I thought it was going to be an everyday historical "bodice ripper", but the author's characters are so fully realized and the setting so engaging and real that I was quickly swept up in the narrative.
And what a story! Involving the machinations of the wealthy black upper class in 1940's Harlem at the very beginnings of the struggle for civil rights. Friendship, love, lust, deceit in an historical era and a backdrop that has seldom, if ever, been written about. Beautifully written with startling twists and turns in the narrative. If you are looking for historical fiction that is absorbing and different, this is the book for you! Thank you Byrd's Books in Bethel, CT for this advance reader's copy
Profile Image for Linda Neff.
1 review2 followers
June 14, 2017
I'm still pinching myself having had the good fortune of reading an advance copy of Sophfronia Scott's brilliant new book. Her exquisite masterpiece, set primarily in 1940s Harlem, and based on a French classic, is immediately involving. Sophfronia’s dynamic characters play through and around the edges of important life themes of love, vulnerability, greed, class, risk, trauma, spirituality, forgiveness and racism. These themes are ultimately lessons applicable to our current time and world. Reading Unforgivable Love was like listening to the most beautifully scored symphony - so much depth, spirit and soul. This novel is pure balm for a reader’s soul.
Profile Image for BernieMck.
617 reviews27 followers
February 17, 2019
This book was a reimagining of Dangerous Liaison's, which by the way, I never read. This book was set in Harlem in the late 1940's. It is full of deception and malicious scheming orchestrated by Miss Mae Malveaux. After Mae reeks havoc and cunningly manipulates innocent people, their lives change and not for better. This book did indeed have it's moments when I was rolling my eyes because a woman was being taking advantage of or was doing something overly stupid. All the characters in this book did not have a happily ever after moment which made this quite an interesting and enjoyable read.
Profile Image for B.
452 reviews107 followers
March 2, 2019
Read (audiobook) this book for the #readsoullit 2019 read-a-long.

First, let me say that I have not read Dangerous Liaisons. There have been numerous tv/film adaptations, a few of which I’ve seen. This book is a retelling with a black cast. Above all the writing is excellent. I’m just not a fan of sh*tty people, doing sh*tty things, just for sh*ttiness sake. Like, I can’t.

From the mid-point to the end it was a struggle to focus on who was being evil to who now and why? Oh, there really isn’t a why, just because they’re sh*tty humans. People playing games with and ruining people’s lives for sport just isn’t in my wheelhouse.

-side note- can someone tell me the point of Ike???
Profile Image for Belinda.
142 reviews1 follower
March 1, 2019
Really enjoyed reading and participating in the #readsoullit.

I am giving this book a 3 stars maybe 3 1/2. I went into this book not knowing anything but what the description said. I also never read/saw Dangerous Liaisons. From the start I did not find myself liking or rooting for any of them. There was so much plotting and scheming. In fairness, I also realized this would not be a book/story I would normally gravitate to. I think for this type of story I would enjoy it in movie format but not as a book. The last third of the book did have some redeeming qualities. But again not a book I would gravitate to.
Profile Image for Melanie Page.
Author 4 books89 followers
November 15, 2017
This review was originally published at Grab the Lapels. Please click the link to see covers of the original French work!

I would like to thank Sophfronia Scott for sending me a copy of her latest novel, Unforgivable Love, published by William Morrow, an imprint of Harper Collins. The expected publishing date is September 26, 2017.

At 509 pages, Unforgivable Love is a long novel full of tangles of relationships among several characters. The chapters are told from different points of view, all in 3rd-person past tense. I was very excited to read this book; it’s a re-telling of a famous novel, but now with an all-black cast set in Harlem.

As you can perhaps tell from the synopsis, Unforgivable Love is a big book of plots and schemes and sex. The characters aren’t what you’ve maybe read about the black community in Harlem in the 1940s because these are wealthy people. They don’t have to work; they mainly try to demonstrate who has the most power. Knowing that, I still had difficulty accepting the characters’ motivations.

In the first few pages, we find a teen-aged Mae with her best friend, Alice. Quickly we learn the girls are sexually attracted to each other, but because Alice has unprotected sexual relationships with men, she’s pregnant, which causes her mother to marry her off. This moment impacts Mae forever, increasing her resolve to never be under someone else’s control — including men.

Later, in her early 30s, Mae acknowledges she does want to be loved, despite her cold, calculating personality. But it’s all the work her mother did to make her a “respectable” heiress — trips to Europe, making sure Mae is beautiful, looking for the right kind of man to marry Mae — that has kept Mae safe from real love. Now, this moment is 32 pages into a 509-page book. Thus, readers need Mae thinking about her motivations throughout the book. She narrates her own chapters, so the opportunity is there. Without this thread of complex emotions running throughout the book, it’s easy for Mae to fall into a stereotype of villain.

Val was the most confusing character. He swings from emotional to cold, loving Elizabeth and/or Mae. I never knew which way he was going to go, but I knew the 3rd-person narrator wanted me to dislike him. He ruins women’s lives to “amuse” himself. He makes “subtle calculations” and “measured out time carefully.” He’s like a snake when he lets a woman “marinate in her escape, or what she thought was her escape.” Yet he’s happy that “there were always a few bribable people who had access to her.” I was uncomfortable with a character who both stalks and loves the same woman, but more importantly, I didn’t understand his feelings.

While I didn’t understand the characters, Sophfronia Scott’s writing was so spot on that in places it warmed me. Young Cecily, who spent a year with her great-aunt and uncle in North Carolina to keep her out of the city and “respectable,” learns to plant and sow, bake and feed, feel the rhythms of nature and her body. Thus, when she’s sexually excited, it’s so fitting that:
When she reached the pinnacle of this exquisite ache she felt herself burst open like a bag of sugar…
Most of these shining moments come from Cecily’s chapters. After a time in North Carolina, Cecily compares her new location to her home in Harlem. In the city:
. . . there seemed to be fewer ways to mark time here, aside from a clock and a calendar. . . . The flowers couldn’t tell her the season because the ones she saw were often forced to bloom out of time. . . The people here were always insisting on their own time — time for drinks, time for church, time for dinner, time to dance, time to play bridge.
And Harlem did seem like a rather odd setting for Unforgivable Love. Characters spend the most time in the country at Val’s wealthy aunt’s house. Based on everything I know about Harlem, I wanted to read more about what it was like to come off the back of the Harlem Renaissance, which ended in the mid-1930s. In the 1940s, there were riots and black politicians elected. At one point, Elizabeth has a debate with Val about the book The Street by Ann Petry, published in 1946. It’s contemporary, set in post-WWII Harlem. Elizabeth makes connections to the book, but Val says there are none because the main character doesn’t represent their Harlem lives. And I agreed. Even the one club the characters in Harlem visit is cut off from the rest of the city’s culture and people. I wanted more signs that I was in Harlem through characters reflecting on why Harlem is unique. Otherwise, any city would do.

Unforgivable Love is a reimagining that slowly burns until closes with a bang. There are tangles that remain knotted because it’s unclear how they were tangled in the first place, and the goal to have revenge through manipulated sexual relationships was exhausting to this reader. I gather it makes a difference if you have read the 1782 French classic epistolary novel Les Liaisons dangereuses by Pierre Choderlos de Laclos first.
Profile Image for Christine.
Author 25 books258 followers
March 8, 2017
A sexy, suspenseful, and lyrical retelling of Dangerous Liaisons, set in late 1940s Harlem - Sophfronia Scott is a gifted novelist with the heart of a poet. I read this novel in galleys and was immediately captivated - can't wait for it to meet other readers in the fall of 2017 when it will be published.
Profile Image for Ginger Pollard.
376 reviews3 followers
October 13, 2017
I have struggled to get through this book for a week. It just isn't getting anywhere. I can't waste any more time on it. Maybe one day I'll revisit it. I won an ARC of this book from Goodreads. Thank you, Goodreads.
Profile Image for Charlie Smith.
403 reviews20 followers
October 23, 2017
First, only fair to admit, I love unto the point of obsession all iterations of Les Liaisons Dangereuses, although I've not read the 1782 French original (and if you have, well, touch you) and lean rather more toward the 1999 re-telling,Cruel Intentions, featuring Ryan Phillippe's ass and his uncovering of the gay-sex between the characters played by Eric Mabius and Joshua Jackson.

Thus, when I read about this novel in People Magazine, its premise of Dangerous Liaisons re-told in 1940's Harlem appealed to me, promising to be something I'd eagerly devour. Of course, I've been fooled before. Like a junkie, I read the book pages in any magazine I can get my hands on, and while I'm not a fan of People --- and that sentence is another blog entirely --- my sister subscribes and I tear out the book page and read all the quick-synopses, frequently suckered in by a good press-representative spin. All too often I then find myself starting one of these books and saying, WHAT THE HELL WERE THEY TALKING ABOUT/WHO PAID THEM OFF - THIS IS AWFUL!

Luckily, with Unforgivable Love, that was not the case.

Sophfronia Scott's writing vividly brings to life a period, a Zeitgeist, a social milieu, and emotional landscapes with attention to detail in scene painting and the interiority of characters' thoughts, all contributing to a portrait of a historical time, place, and people whose lives and behaviors resonate in the now.

The story is told in close-third, from the point-of-view of four main voices, Mae Malveaux, Val "Valiant" Jackson, Elizabeth Townsend, and Cecily Vaughn.

Mae Malveaux is the reincarnation in this tale of the original's Marquise de Merteuil, a character who can easily come off as irredeemably loathsome and cruel. In this retelling, she is given a backstory which means to explain her cold as ice manipulations and calculated ruination of others, but, in the end, the author allows the character to remain unlikable, her malevolence grounded in her psychoses but never excused; the reader feels some empathy for her but not sympathy, which is as it should be. As one character says, "I don't know what good can come of anything that woman does....Still,....she is family and so I pray for her." What is refreshing in Sophronia Scott's version is that Mae is not demonized for her embrace of her sexuality. Her easy carnality is not portrayed as a character flaw, as is so often the case when writing about women (or, people, but, mostly, women) and it is not that which leads to her ultimate downfall.

Val is the tale's iteration of the original's Vicomte de Valmont, and here he is far more sympathetic from the beginning than he is in other tellings of the tale. Despite his being an inveterate and unapologetic hound with a sketchy past and income from illegal sources, who uses and tosses aside women like chattel, he is early on imbued with a conscience and questioning of what it is he has done, is doing, and what it does to others. Though he plays at faith as a tool of seduction, it reaches him, touches him, and manages to change him by opening his mind to ways of thinking he'd not previously explored. More than any other character, Val arcs and grows.

There is a great deal of faith in the story, the church and its ministers play a role in the story, especially in the denouement, but there is nothing preachy or pontifical, rather, Christian faith and community are central to the lives of some of the characters.

The most faith-driven of the main characters is Elizabeth Townsend, who might have been a minister had her world been different and had she not been raised to cede control of her life to first her father, then her husband, Kyle, a civil rights lawyer who is largely absent from her life and the narrative as he is off fighting fights in the deep South. Val is challenged by Mae to seduce and corrupt the faithful and pious Elizabeth, she who has not ever fully explored nor embraced her own truth, her true desires --- desires on all levels, ambition, emotion, and sexual. It is in pursuit of a victory in overcoming Elizabeth's reluctance to live and feel that both Val and Elizabeth are permanently shaken, altered, brought to awarenesses that have the power to destroy them.

Mae also sics Val on her young relative, Cecily, whose sexuality and self-awareness are nascent but bubbling to the surface, craving release. Val aims to corrupt her, part of Mae's plot of revenge against a past lover who considers Mae unfit to wed, and has managed to get the virginal Cecily pledged to him, enraging Mae.

With so many seductions and so much scheming, this could easily veer into cheesy-soap-opera territory, but it never does. The sex scenes are sensual, lusty without being vulgar (though I have NO trouble with vulgar, licentious sex scenes) and at 506 pages, this is a longish read but it moves quickly in relatively short chapters and, despite my familiarity with the framework of the plot, there was a great deal of tension and suspense as I read, waiting to see how the characters would end up and by what method.
Profile Image for Diane.
845 reviews78 followers
October 1, 2017
Author Sophfronia Scott is by her own admission obsessed with all versions (books and movies) of Les Liasions Dangereuses. When her friend screenwriter Jenny Lumet said that there should be a version of the story with an African American cast, Scott got to work.

Unforgiveable Love- A Retelling of Dangerous Liaisons is set in Harlem during the summer of 1947, when Jackie Robinson became the first black Major League baseball player, playing for the Brooklyn Dodgers.

Mae Malveaux is a wealthy heiress, her mother having made her money inventing a hair gel and using young Mae's picture on the packaging. When her best friend is torn from her, forced to marry in older man and move to Detroit, it is an event that changes Mae forever.

She doens't believe in love, she uses men's affections and throws them away when she is done with them. Valiant Jackson is a man who has a shadier reputation in Harlem- he is always seen in the clubs with a different beautiful woman every night, but Mae is the one woman he desires. He is obsessed with baseball, and follows Jackie Robinson's career rise.

When Mae finds an opportunity to gain revenge on a man who left her, she strikes a bargain with Val- if he beds Cecily, the virginal young woman (and Mae's cousin) who is to be engaged to the man, Mae will finally sleep with Val.

Much of the story takes place at Val's aunt's summer retreat in upstate New York. When Val arrives to begin his mission, he finds his aunt hosting Elizabeth, the lovely wife of a civil rights lawyer currently working down south.

Val decides to while away the time waiting for Cecily by playing a cat-and-mouse game with the honorable Elizabeth. He schemes to get her to into bed, but when he develops real feelings for her, and she for him, it shakes his world.

Even if you are familiar with the story of Dangerous Liaisons, Unforgiveable Love will still surprise you. Scott brings her characters to life, and 1947 Harlem is a terrific setting for this retelling. I also liked the role that baseball played in this story- Val teaching Elizabeth how to play the game is a unique and interesting plotline.

The denouement of the story is set in a church, which is an integral part of the Harlem community. It is a heartbreaking novel, one that had me gasping at times, but ultimately there is some redemption for some of the characters. I also liked how the author shows us that women can own their sexuality, but with that also comes a responsibility to themselves and others.

If you are a fan of Dangerous Liaisons, you'll want to put Unforgiveable Love on your TBR list. I recommend it. It would make a terrific movie or play, and I found myself casting the roles in my head.
Profile Image for Andrial Durant.
104 reviews
February 15, 2019
Mae was that character for me that really irked my nerves. She played on everybody’s emotions. She was like the puppet master and she didn’t even do a good job at it. I mean what was the damn point. She didn’t get Sam and the punishment for her game playing was a point the finger church sermon. Nope nope, she should have contracted a disease from the many men she had bedded.

Valiant Val Jackson was another shameful character because he could have told Mae no! But he went along with the game just for a night in bed with her...that was ridiculous. But I guess in him making those private payments to church somehow absolved him of his sins...nope that’s not acceptable. I don’t care what nobody’s says he basically raped Cecily. Coerced her into giving him her virginity all because she was madly in love with Sam and thought that Val did her a favor. But in actuality what he did was impregnate her and took the cowardly way out of the drama by basically committing suicide. I do not feel bad for me and just because he left all his estate to Cecily and the baby..once again is that suppose to absolve him of the bad choices he made with Mae.

The only innocent people in this whole book was Cecily, and Sam. Not even Elizabeth who by the way committed suicide too because she had fallen for Val who made her feel like stupid that as a married woman falling for this whore of a man who was playing games. In the beginning when she was turning him down I was cheering thinking that she would fall for his game but she did...

I don’t know 🤷🏾‍♀️ this book really just took the cake. Maybe that was the point but yeah Mae and Val Get no sympathy. Mae should have committed suicide too instead of possibly running off to Paris...sounds like a slap on the wrist.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Shannon (That's So Poe).
1,286 reviews122 followers
February 21, 2019
This book really didn't work for me, although I strongly suspect that is due to the source material (Dangerous Liaisons) more than Scott's writing. The best part of the book, in fact, was Scott's beautiful prose and the way she was able to describe each scene and fully immerse you in it. The setting of 1940s Harlem was fantastic as well, and extremely well done.

The plot and characters, though, were atrocious! Each character felt too one-dimensional (just "cruel" or "naive" or "righteous"), and although backstories and justifications for their approaches to life were provided, it fell flat for me and left me unable to connect with anyone other than some of the side characters (Aunt Pearl was amazing, for example). The plot was glacially slow in the beginning as backstories were explored, and then like a soap opera with one betrayal after another in the later half of the book. Overall, I couldn't empathize with any of the main characters and didn't see any of their romances as being actually loving (rather than just neediness to fill their own internal voids), which made it hard to care about what happened to them other than hoping they all received their just desserts in the end. I also wasn't a huge fan of the unequal outcomes for Val versus Mae, which felt sexist in its punishment of Mae and forgiveness of Val (again, likely due to the original story).

I'd be willing to try other books by Sophfronia Scott since I enjoyed her writing, but I think I will completely avoid reading Dangerous Liaisons or watching any of its adaptations!!
Profile Image for Khamis Kay.
42 reviews6 followers
March 3, 2019
Firstly I have not read the french classic Dangerous Liasons so this is my first encounter of the story.

This book is beautifully written and very engaging. I enjoyed the nature and the explorations of identity, sexuality, love and what love means for different people. The twists and turns were great and I am all for the drama. However saying all of this and after reading 500+pages I was not happy with the ending AT ALL. I may have had a different take if I was familiar with the original text but for me the end was a let down. But Sophfronia Scott write beautiful and her words enchanting and engulfed me. 3.5 for me.
Profile Image for Sandra Barron.
Author 4 books49 followers
November 11, 2017
Flawless prose in the retelling of Dangerous Liaisons, set in Harlem & Westchester in the 1940s. A line that sums up the entire book and contains so much truth: "The heart was never satisfied with a little bit of caring. It was a greedy lump of muscle, quick to feast on the tiniest morsel of sincere admiration. But once the heart has consumed admiration, it always wanted more--demanded more." (Val). If you like social rituals, psychological manipulation, the rituals of the wealthy, characters sensitive to appearances, you'll enjoy this story.
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