A woman torn between the memory of a dead husband and a living, stirring passion faces a dangerous moral choice in a Southern mansion.
A tense, character-driven tale unfolds as Barbara arrives at Rosemary to revisit a life she thought she understood. As the night deepens, old loyalties collide with new desires, stirring doubt, guilt, and longing. The story moves from a rain-soaked journey to intimate rooms where memory, love, and duty press close together, challenging what it means to be true to oneself.
The book centers on a morally charged confrontation between love and the past. Through sharp dialogue, uneasy humor, and vivid sensory detail, it explores how a single decision can redefine a life and test the limits of forgiveness.
- Atmosphere of mood and memory in a Georgian-era setting
- A pivotal relationship strained by past vows and present longing
- Moments of restraint, tension, and ethical reckonings
- Convincing, morally complex narration that probes fidelity and guilt
Ideal for readers of moral romance and gothic-influenced drama, who savor stories about love, memory, and the consequences of choice.
Hearst, a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, was editor-in-chief of the Hearst newspapers and an heir to the publishing empire established by his father until his death in 1993.