4.5 Stars
When first they meet, Anna is a twenty-six year-old Beckett scholar who taught at Queens University, and Samuel Orr is a pastor of a small mission hall in east Belfast, married, with three sons, his building between an off-licence and wasteland, filled with weeds, refuse, broken glass. They meet under his sign above the door, which reads:
ACQUAINT THYSELF WITH HIM AND BE AT PEACE. JOB 22:21
She was taking a photograph of the setting, the early-autumn evening light fading from the sky. He stepped out of his door and into her photograph, a film camera.
He asks if she only photographs places of worship, she replies: “Is there anything else?” He responds by quoting Psalms: “The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament sheweth his handywork.” She counters his scripture with words she holds as holy, Beckett: “The earth makes a sound as of sighs.” He asks if she is saved. Drawing once again on Beckett, “What is that unforgettable line? she said. If I do not love you I shall not love.”
Religion is his passion, he loves the words of scripture, and it is there he finds beauty. Words are her passion, Beckett’s words and then his when he courts her with scripture. She falls in love with his words, he falls in love with her passion. Despite the obvious obstacles that should prevent this courtship begat by scripture, this love affair fueled by their individual passions creates a new passion. There is a child on the way.
The truth emerges with the birth of Samuel, slowly repercussions follow, and guilt begins to wear on him, on them. Eventually there is the inevitable domino effect and the unforeseen, but unavoidable brutal consequences that unfold over the following few years.
Some thirty years later, Sam is living in New York City, his memories of all those years ago faded, the edges worn, but not completely forgotten. It is here he must confront his past and find a way to untangle the story of his being, a love conceived by way of deception, before the consequences consume them all.
Religion, faith, morality, marriage, love, family, deception, guilt, grief, bitterness, vengeance, forgiveness, all of these are observed, questioned in this haunting, beautifully lyrical debut novel which abstains from easy solutions or resolutions. It leaves you, instead, with a sense of compassion and, perhaps, recognition of how human we all are, and how utterly we fail at perfection.
Pub Date: 24 Oct 2017
Many thanks for the ARC provided by Houghton Mifflin Harcourt