79
0
Support the library.
Your support helps keep books free for everyone ❤️
Sponsored
Synopsis
An intimate and lyrical celebration of great love, great art, and the sacrifices we make for bothFor fifty years Abe and Jane have been coming to Central Park, as starry-eyed young lovers, as frustrated and exhausted parents, as artists watching their careers take flight. They ...
An intimate and lyrical celebration of great love, great art, and the sacrifices we make for both
For fifty years Abe and Jane have been coming to Central Park, as starry-eyed young lovers, as frustrated and exhausted parents, as artists watching their careers take flight. They came alone when they needed to get away from each other, and together when they had something important to discuss. The Park has been their witness for half a century of love. Until now.
Jane is dying, and Abe is recounting their life together as a way of keeping them going: the parts they knew—their courtship and early marriage, their blossoming creative lives—and the parts they didn’t always want to know—the determined young student of Abe’s looking for a love story of her own, and their son, Max, who believes his mother chose art over parenthood and who has avoided love and intimacy at all costs. Told in various points of view, even in conversation with Central Park itself, these voices weave in and out to paint a portrait as complicated and essential as love itself.
For fifty years Abe and Jane have been coming to Central Park, as starry-eyed young lovers, as frustrated and exhausted parents, as artists watching their careers take flight. They came alone when they needed to get away from each other, and together when they had something important to discuss. The Park has been their witness for half a century of love. Until now.
Jane is dying, and Abe is recounting their life together as a way of keeping them going: the parts they knew—their courtship and early marriage, their blossoming creative lives—and the parts they didn’t always want to know—the determined young student of Abe’s looking for a love story of her own, and their son, Max, who believes his mother chose art over parenthood and who has avoided love and intimacy at all costs. Told in various points of view, even in conversation with Central Park itself, these voices weave in and out to paint a portrait as complicated and essential as love itself.
You May Also Like
Diet Right for Your Personality Type: The Revolutionary 4-Week Weight-Loss Plan That Works for You
Jennifer Widerstrom
Secret
Brigid Kemmerer
Firearms: An Illustrated History (Smithsonian)
D.K. Publishing
Bread Grows in Winter
Ida Friederike Görres
The Fantastic Book of Chemistry Jokes: For Everyone, Not Just Chemists (The Fantastic Joke Books)
Shane Van
International Political Economy: Sixth Edition
Thomas Oatley