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The Sunday Wife

Review

The Sunday Wife

THE SUNDAY WIFE is a compelling, moving, poignant novel that speaks
to the vicissitudes of marriage, the ebb and flow of friendships,
the delicate balance of maintaining one's integrity in a small
community, and the necessity of claiming those things that make
each of us a whole self. Cassandra King's second novel is so near
perfect that it reads like a symphony, each note following the
other in perfect pitch.

In Dean, the narrator, she has created a character who is at times
funny, sad, ridiculous, pitiful, strong, talented and inspiring. On
the one hand, she represents the plight of too many women trapped
in lives of quiet desperation; and on the flip side, she is so full
of life and love that we can't help but cheer her on as she makes
her way across the canvas of her life.

Dean is married to Ben, an ambitious Methodist preacher who, for
more then 20 years, has taken his wife for granted. Early in their
marriage he cast her in the narrow, circumscribed role of a
pastor's wife, never once consulting her about anything. To his way
of thinking, only his selfish, self-serving needs coupled with the
expectations his parishioners project onto her are all she needs in
her life. She is a woman of low self-esteem who has deferred to his
whims and strong will all of her married life --- until he is
promoted to a new parish in Crystal Springs, Florida.

"With the moving van a few minutes behind us, we pulled our cars,
me following Ben --- a metaphor for our life together --- into the
driveway of our new house."

A few weeks after settling in, Dean meets Augusta Holderfield, a
rich, flamboyant, rebellious rule breaker and falls under her
spell.

As the novel unfolds around this oddly matched pair of women, King
introduces us to the movers and shakers of Ben's new congregation:
the gossips and troublemakers whose lives revolve around petty
disputes and childish backstabbing. Of course, Dean pays dearly for
her deep friendship with and dependence on the notorious Augusta.
When the two women, who are outcasts by nature, take a Gypsy
fortuneteller named Celeste under their wing, the reputations of
all three are blackened as they are infamously linked
together.

SUNDAY WIFE is a beautifully crafted novel; the prose is clear, the
characters are extraordinarily limned, the situations so realistic
that readers will think they are reading about themselves or their
neighbors. We all know people who resemble the characters in SUNDAY
WIFE; which is one of the most intriguing elements of the book. One
can only hope that Cassandra King is already working on the sequel.
Enjoy this wonderful book, which is sure to become one of your best
reads this year.

Reviewed by Barbara Lipkien Gershenbaum on January 23, 2011

The Sunday Wife
by Cassandra King

  • Publication Date: January 1, 2005
  • Genres: Fiction, Literary Fiction
  • Mass Market Paperback: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Hyperion
  • ISBN-10: 0786890703
  • ISBN-13: 9780786890705