It’s almost a melodrama, with massive inheritances, infidelities, and so many secrets, but it’s also a bit of a sweet meander through family history and memories. Despite all the secrets, there’s almost no tension in this story. Partly because the characters are so cocooned in money and privilege, I never actually worried about their welfare and futures. Instead, I was intensely curious about their choices. The family is New York enough that Upper West Side is vastly different than Upper East, and uptown enough that more than one of the heirs thinks downtown is distant enough for adultery.
The central question of the story is happiness in marriage, and so The Heirs looks at why and how the Falkes came together, their backgrounds and expectations and previous relationships. This marriage produces five boys, and of course a parents’ marriage affects the children, so we see how they grew and how they chose their partners. (I expected to be confused by the five boys, but their personalities diverge pretty early on in the novel.) The book explores the relationships of Eleanor’s parents, and the story of her first love — a Jewish boy she was forbidden to marry — and the woman he ultimately marries, revealing fascinating stories, in wider and wider circles, but all circling this basic question of happiness in marriage.
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Wow, this sounds like an intense read!
This is a new author for me - thank you for the information