The Lovers of Amherst

The Lovers of Amherst

by WilliamNicholson (Author)

Synopsis

Passion and poetry: two love stories intertwine - a true historical one and an imagined contemporary one, both intimately connected with Emily Dickinson's life.

In 1881 a young married couple, Mabel and David Todd, arrive in stuffy Amherst, Massachusetts. He will take up a post at Amherst College; she will embark on an affair that rocks the town. Emily Dickinson's brother is the College's Treasurer, Austin Dickinson, a respected citizen of the town and a married man with three children. Austin's sister Emily lives as a recluse in the house next-door to Austin. Over the months that follow the Todds' arrival, Austin falls passionately in love with Mabel, and she with him.

In the present day, Alice Dickinson, 24 years old, seeks to escape her copy-writing job and make a living as a screenwriter. She takes a short holiday to Amherst to research a screenplay on a story that has fascinated her since college days, where a love of Emily Dickinson's poems was triggered by the coincidence of her own surname.The story is the illicit love affair between Austin Dickinson and Mabel Todd.

As she researches one love affair taking place under the watchful eye of Emily Dickinson, Alice embarks on a passionate liaison of her own, and the novel interweaves the stories of these two loves, illuminating both past and present in the process.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 304
Publisher: Quercus
Published: 28 Jul 2016

ISBN 10: 1848666500
ISBN 13: 9781848666504

Media Reviews
Nicholson creates a strong historical base from which he imaginatively recreates the time period and the personalities involved * Independent on Sunday *
The history is fascinating and the poems are sublime * The Sunday Times *

Masterly ... zig-zagging between two contrasting eras, weaves love, sex and poetry together seamlessly

* Mail on Sunday *
A beguiling meditation on poetry and love * The Times *
A compelling reflection on sex and marriage in the 19th Century...an enjoyable concoction of first-hand accounts and modern imagination. * The Financial Times *