Hoffman conveys the mesmerizing lure of a lost love with haunting sensuality but March's excuses for Hollis's violent personality and for his physical abuse of her and her teenaged daughter, Gwen, are well beyond the willed myopia of even obsessive love. Hollis now determines to win March back, and she can't resist his single-minded pursuit. When Hollis finally did return, he wed Richard's sister, who has since died. March waited for him for three years, then married her next-door neighbor, Richard Cooper. When March comes back to her childhood home in a small Massachusetts town after 19 years in California, she is swept with longing for Hollis, her former soul mate and lover who ran away in a fit of pique. Unfortunately, Hoffman abandons psychological credibility halfway through, after which her protagonist, March Murray, behaves like an automaton. In this novel, the characters' behavior, while highly emotional, is initially at least traceable to psychological motivation. Often, in her soulful novels, Hoffman (Practical Magic, etc.) lets mystical atmospherics-animals that take on superhuman qualities, intense colors and temperatures, minute vibrations in the air that signal ghosts or spirits-do all the work while her characters behave in strange and incredible ways under the influence of forces outside themselves.
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