The Senator's Wife by Sue Miller

The Senator's Wife

by Sue Miller

Love came late to Meri, but in a rush: she met Nathan at thirty-six, he moved in a month later, and they married a month after that. Now they are exchanging their comfortable mid-western existence for life in a college town in New England, a house of their own, a more responsible teaching job for Nathan - a new life that Meri is not sure she even wants. Though she loves her husband, with an erotic heat that shows no sign of cooling, some rebel force in her struggles with these changes, and she feels there is trouble ahead for their marriage. When they find the just the right house, Meri baulks at the expense, at the sheer adult-ness of it all, but Nathan is full of the possibilities of the place, and boyishly excited by the fact that their next-door neighbour is the distinguished Senator Tom Naughton, a political hero of his, now a man in his seventies. The senator is nowhere to be seen, but Meri strikes up an unexpected friendship with his wife, the elegant, patrician Delia - the very antithesis of Meri, with all her smudgy tomboy sexiness.
The more Meri comes to know about the Naughtons, the more she is drawn to this private, poised woman, sensing that she has much to learn from her - about marriage, love and motherhood. But the closer, too, she comes to a final, terrible breach of trust that could ruin everything. Beautifully written and alive with telling, truthful detail, The Senator's Wife is a completely absorbing story about the sacrifices love demands of us all.

Reviewed by jamiereadthis on

2 of 5 stars

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I suppose somewhere in the world, people talk like this, think like this, and act like this. I’m glad it seems foreign to me. The writing tics began to grate on my nerves around page 50, like the way synonyms are repeated to make a phrase seem profound, or how every fifth word of dialogue is italicized. “When everything is profound, darling, nothing is.” — Me, probably, if I showed up in this book.

Overall: it wasn’t bad (see, there I go again), but I’m in the mood for a lot more mayhem right now.

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  • 5 December, 2017: Reviewed