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I was a bit dubious about this book when I first started it, but was driven on by my experience of Malamud's other books. Of course it proved to be a very good novel as I should have known. Poor old Dubin, trying to write a biography of D. H. Lawrence while juggling a torrid and changeable affair, worrying about his son, an American Vietnam deserter trapped in Sweden and a daughter who seems distant and unreachable. It takes him to the edge of sanity at times. So many wonderful lines in this, I was constantly jotting bits down. Wonderful sense of place, with the changing seasons of the north east US, he had me freezing one minute and basking in the summer sun the next. No neat ending, typical Malamud.