Review
The Senator's Wife
Meri
is newly married to college professor Nathan. They relocate when he
snags an excellent new job in the east, though she has mixed
feeling about the move. Although pleased for her husband, she is
losing a job she enjoys and an apartment she loves. Nathan decides
that they will buy an attached house that is above their means ---
mostly, Meri believes, because he discovers that his hero,
ex-senator Tom Naughton, lives next door. She begins to wonder, not
for the first time, what place she holds in their
partnership.
Meri is somewhat mollified when she meets the senator's wife,
Delia, an elderly yet vibrant woman who welcomes Meri into her home
and shows Meri around the city while still keeping Meri at an arm's
distance. Meri and Nathan are bewildered to find that Tom Naughton
is nowhere to be seen; Delia off-handedly remarks that he will be
home for a visit eventually. Meanwhile, Meri has found a job for an
hour-long newsmagazine airing on a local radio station. She adores
the work and is good at it.
Meri's story alternates with Delia's, as Delia muses on her long
marriage to Tom and the reason for their living separately: Tom is
chronically unable to stop his string of affairs. Yet Delia loves
him, and welcomes him into her life and her bed intermittently, an
attitude that divides her family --- especially after Tom's affair
with a young friend of one of their children.
Meri is not happy to discover that she is pregnant. Her condition
causes her to reconsider her relationship with her parents. Will
she resort to the unloving, and sometimes physically abusive,
manner of parenting she experienced growing up? As her body
changes, so does her marriage. Nathan works longer hours, and is
distracted by his job and the book he is writing. Meri's own work
is disrupted when one of her co-workers chastises her for getting
pregnant, making Meri wonder about the future of the job she so
enjoys. And Meri's rather nebulous growing friendship with Delia is
interrupted when the older woman leaves to spend time in
Paris.
Delia has asked Meri to tend her houseplants and bring in her mail
while she is away. Meri spends longer and longer periods of time in
Delia's house, which feels more welcoming than her own. She also
finds herself growing increasingly fascinated with Delia.
Eventually, Meri cannot resist prying into the most private corners
of Delia's home and her life. She regrets her lapse of moral
judgment nearly as soon as she begins it, yet she continues. When
Delia returns, Meri is uncomfortable with what she knows about
Delia's personal life. She is even more uneasy when she meets
Delia's husband. And something else perturbs her: her failure to
confide in Nathan about what she has done.
As always, Sue Miller’s descriptions of women's relationships
and emotions feel dead-on and relatable. The subtle yet definite
feeling of lives on a collision course makes THE SENATOR'S WIFE a
riveting page-turner. As in real life, these people are not
one-note, and so they are delightfully unpredictable. As the
intertwined lives of Meri and Delia twist in a startling yet (in
retrospect) inevitable climax, the reader is left pondering intent,
regret, forgiveness, the nature of marriage, motherhood and the
ability of people to change, making this multilayered and
thought-provoking novel a satisfying read long after the book is
finished.
Reviewed by Terry Miller Shannon (terryms2001@yahoo.com) on January 23, 2011
The Senator's Wife
- Publication Date: January 8, 2008
- Genres: Fiction
- Hardcover: 320 pages
- Publisher: Knopf
- ISBN-10: 0307264203
- ISBN-13: 9780307264206



