Louise Dean is the author of two previous novels- Becoming Strangers, which was awarded the Betty Trask Prize in 2004, and was longlisted for the Man Booker Prize and the Guardian First Book Award, and This Human Season. She lives in Kent and has three children.
Brittle, sometimes brutal comedy of sex and marriage shows British and American ex-pats spending some very unhappy years in a very unromanticized South of France. British pharmaceuticals salesman Richard lives on the crossroads of rip-you-off-Riviera and rob-you-blind-Provence with his French wife Valerie and 13-year-old son Maxence, who may or may not have serious psychological problems. Valerie's parents live next door, mostly on Richard's largesse. Drawn with few redeeming characteristics, Valerie is not only cold and lazy but seems to dislike Max. Unhappy Richard claims to yearn for an intimacy he can't find with either Valerie or the string of women he sleeps with while traveling for his job. Valerie and Richard socialize increasingly with their equally unhappily married neighbors, artistic but shallow American Jeff and British Rachel, a devout Christian. Gradually Valerie decides she's in love with Jeff, and Richard finds himself drawn to Rachel. Just as tensions heat up, Rachel pressures Jeff to travel with her to Africa to save orphans, realizes she has been duped - the orphans are not what they seem - and loses her faith. Meanwhile Richard goes to Africa to open a new territory for anti-depressants, has a moral epiphany and decides to quit his sleazy job. When Rachel learns of Valerie and Jeff's affair, she returns to England with daughter Maud, the one human being for whom Jeff genuinely cares. Richard wants to leave France too, but not without Max; Rachel demands custody, even though the boy hates his mother. Cut off from his family, without a job, Richard slides into a drunken nervous breakdown. Eventually he connects with Rachel, and they begin a long-distance love affair just as Valerie and Jeff's affair begins to cool. Whether Richard can find happiness remains unclear, but his shiftless yet loving in-laws may point the way.Although neither the plot nor the characters quite jell, Dean (This Human Season, 2007) has a darkly optimistic, intellectually humanistic sensibility that recalls Iris Murdoch. (Kirkus Reviews)