What's the Name of That Book??? discussion

Ferney
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SOLVED: Adult Fiction > SOLVED. Married woman discovers she is reincarnation of another man's love [s]

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message 1: by Kathy (new)

Kathy | 3 comments Set in England, they are doing up a house in the country. She meets an older man who she feels drawn to. He wants her to kill herself when he dies so they can be together in new lives at the same time.

I read this maybe 5-10 years ago. Not my usual type of boo.


message 2: by Nicole (new)

Nicole Gehrman | 12 comments Is it called rebecca by Daphne du Maurier


message 3: by Kathy (new)

Kathy | 3 comments Nicole wrote: "Is it called rebecca by Daphne du Maurier"

No, it's definitely not that.


message 4: by Lobstergirl, au gratin (new)

Lobstergirl | 44924 comments Mod
Ferney?

The nature of the self, the ownership of history, the endurance of love--these are some of the themes touched upon in Long's engrossing if somewhat disturbing tale of lovers separated by history. Mike Martin, a lecturer in history in London, and his young wife, Gabriela (Gally), are searching for the English country cottage that Mike hopes will assuage both his wife's sorrow from her miscarriage and the midnight terrors she suffers, nightmares apparently brought on by witnessing her father's death when she was a child. The intuitive and sometimes impulsive Gally is unaccountably attracted to a stone house in complete disrepair, and her rational and deductive husband buys it for her, despite his reservations. Mike and Gally move into an old trailer and begin renovating the cottage, and they conceive a child the first night they spend on their property. The cottage is in Penselwood, a village at a crossroads in British history, and Mike's ideas about historical facts are challenged immediately when he and his wife meet Ferney Miller, an 83-year-old man who insists that the people of Penselwood retain "folk memories" that are truer than written documentation. When Mike decides to write a book about the changes wrought by innovations in farm implements, Ferney persuasively argues that the real innovation was the domestication of the horse, but he can't offer Mike any proof to confirm the notion. As it turns out, Ferney and Gally have other reasons to believe they understand history better than Mike, and despite the vast differences in Gally's and Ferney's ages, their deepening friendship threatens the Martins' marriage....


message 5: by Kathy (new)

Kathy | 3 comments that's it! Thank you! How did you know?


message 6: by Lobstergirl, au gratin (new)

Lobstergirl | 44924 comments Mod
You're welcome. I searched in a database called Novelist (available to library patrons depending on whether your library has it).


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