Infidelity / Stacey May Fowles.

By: Fowles, Stacey May [author.]Material type: TextTextPublisher: [Strawberry Hills, NSW] : ReadHowYouWant, [2015]Copyright date: ©2013Edition: [Large print edition]Description: vii, 319 pages (large print) ; 24 cmContent type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9781459692923Subject(s): Secrecy -- Fiction | Adultery -- Fiction | Man-woman relationships -- FictionGenre/Form: Large type books. DDC classification: C813.6 Summary: Ronnie, a hairdresser with a history of recklessness, feels stifled by the predictable, comfortable life laid out before her with her live-in boyfriend. Charlie is an anxiety-ridden award-winning writer, burdened by his literary success and familial responsibility, including a bread-winning wife and a child with autism. When the unlikely pair meets, a filmic affair begins on office desks and in Toronto hotel rooms, creating a false reality that offers solace in its secrets. Two very different people, trapped by everyday expectations, take pleasure in destroying those expectations together. Their relationship, with all its differences and failings, with all its pleasure and pain, calls into question our rigid and limiting definitions of right and wrong, and what it means to be a partner, parent, lover, and human being.
Tags from this library: No tags from this library for this title. Log in to add tags.
Star ratings
    Average rating: 0.0 (0 votes)

Originally published: Toronto, Ontario : ECW Press, c2013.

Ronnie, a hairdresser with a history of recklessness, feels stifled by the predictable, comfortable life laid out before her with her live-in boyfriend. Charlie is an anxiety-ridden award-winning writer, burdened by his literary success and familial responsibility, including a bread-winning wife and a child with autism. When the unlikely pair meets, a filmic affair begins on office desks and in Toronto hotel rooms, creating a false reality that offers solace in its secrets. Two very different people, trapped by everyday expectations, take pleasure in destroying those expectations together. Their relationship, with all its differences and failings, with all its pleasure and pain, calls into question our rigid and limiting definitions of right and wrong, and what it means to be a partner, parent, lover, and human being.

There are no comments on this title.

to post a comment.