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The Whole World
The Whole World: A Novel | Emily Winslow
1 post | 2 read | 10 to read
At once a sensual and irresistible mystery and a haunting work of psychological insight and emotional depth, The Whole World marks the beginning of a brilliant literary career for Emily Winslow, a superb, limitlessly gifted author.Set in the richly evoked pathways and environs of Cambridge, England, The Whole World unearths the desperate secrets kept by its many complex charactersstudents, professors, detectives, husbands, motherssecrets that lead to explosive consequences.Two Americans studying at Cambridge University, Polly and Liv, both strangers to their new home, both survivors of past mistakes, become quick friends. They find a common interest in Nick, a handsome, charming, seemingly guileless graduate student. For a time, the three engage in harmless flirtation, growing closer while doing research for professor Gretchen Paul, the blind daughter of a famed novelist. But a betrayal, followed by Nicks inexplicable disappearance, brings long-buried histories to the surface.The investigation raises countless questions, and the newspapers report all the most salacious detailsfrom the crime that scars Pollys past to the searing truths concealed in photographs Gretchen cannot see. Soon the three young lovers will discover how little they know about one another, and how devastating the ripples of long-ago actions can be.From the Hardcover edition.
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gradcat
The Whole World: A Novel | Emily Winslow
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I loved this book, but I don‘t know if it‘s for everyone. It starts out well: a YA-type mystery set in Cambridge featuring two American students (female) + one British student (male), who form a tense triangle in which affection is not equal on all sides. Then there‘s the blind prof the three do research for, and the policeman who must deal with the results of the conflicts. The story has revolving narrators; each of the five main characters ⬇️

gradcat (Cont.) has a go, thus there are five different stories (not necessarily unreliable, but at the very least prismatic). The book purports to be the first book in a series of detective novels, but the detective is not really present very much in this one, although he does do his job in a roundabout way. I love Emily Winslow‘s descriptions of Cambridge, as well as the way she has each character reveal their true natures, rather than just telling us⬇️ 5y
gradcat who they are. This is the first book of four in the Keene & Frohmann series—I will definitely be reading the next one. 👍 5y
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