Product Description
Brett had been in love with Charlie from the first day she laid eyes on him in college. When Charlie is brutally murdered, Brett is devastated. But, if she is honest with herself, their marriage had been hanging by a thread for quite some time, especially after Charlie had an affair. The recent reappearance in their lives of his unstable younger brother, Eli, further strained their relationship until Brett, ever steadfast in her devotion to Charlie, began to question her own commitment in the days leading up to his death. Though all clues point to Eli, who's been in and out of psychiatric hospitals for years, any number of people might have been driven to slit the throat of Charlie Moss—a handsome, charismatic man who unwittingly damaged almost every life he touched.
Now, looking back on their lives together, Brett is determined to understand how such a tragedy could have happened—and whether she was somehow complicit. Set against the lush yet desolate autumn beauty of Cape Cod, The Last September is a riveting emotional puzzle. Award-winning author Nina de Gramont takes readers inside the psyche of a woman facing down the meaning of love and loyalty in a mesmerizing novel that is as moving as it is unpredictable.
Now, looking back on their lives together, Brett is determined to understand how such a tragedy could have happened—and whether she was somehow complicit. Set against the lush yet desolate autumn beauty of Cape Cod, The Last September is a riveting emotional puzzle. Award-winning author Nina de Gramont takes readers inside the psyche of a woman facing down the meaning of love and loyalty in a mesmerizing novel that is as moving as it is unpredictable.
Reviews/Praise
"DeGramont's debut novel is the kind of smart and riveting read the fans of a certain kind of campus drama—think Donna Tartt's The Secret History—will devour."—People
"A transfixing debut."—The Washington Post
"Stunning . . . I inhaled this novel in one breath."—Jacquelyn Mitchard
"Will join that shelf reserved for literary classics."—The Providence Journal, Best Books of 2008