19 Broken Country Clare Leslie Hall
This novel described as a fiction/romance/thriller has had loads of accolades heaped upon it and, although set in Dorset, has probably reached a wider readership in the US through being endorsed by Reese Witherspoon as one of her Book Club choices.
It's beautifully written and I wanted to like it more but much of it I found irredeemably sad, too sad in fact although it does end on a lighter note.
The timeline is mid 1950s to late 1960s. As teenagers, Beth and Gabriel meet when off for a walk, she has strayed onto Gabriel's estate where he challenges her somewhat pompously as to being on private land. She, coming from an ordinary background, he from the wealthier landed gentry. They are to fall in love. Beth, a clever schoolgirl is due to follow Gabriel to study at Oxford a year behind him, but for various reasons, not least of all, Gabriel's manipulative mother, placing obstacles in the way, deeming Beth unsuitable, their relationship founders. Beth abandons her academic ambitions and marries a local boy and young farmer who has loved her from a distance. Their happy existence is shattered when Gabriel returns to the village some years later, now a divorced successful author with a son a similar age to hers and Frank's who died in a tragic accident, and for which Beth can't help but blaming Frank for taking an eye off him at a critical moment in time. It is into that setting the former star crossed lovers' paths are to cross and they are to resurrect their relationship realising they never stopped loving each other. Beth is to find herself in a love triangle, does she stay with her thoroughly decent husband who she also loves or make a new life with her first boyfriend who always held a torch for her throughout his own marriage. Her romantic trysts are to trigger a chain of events with fatal consequences.
A myriad of human emotions, love, loss, guilt, atonement, forgiveness and finally hope are at the heart of this book. Very good writing. Although I don't think I would describe it as a personal favourite.