The tale unfolds through alternating narrators, each voice as intimate as a confidant you're inside the heads and hearts of all three, feeling the unfairness, the righteous anger, the helplessness, the confusion-and also the complexity and joy of love. I won't spoil the experience by giving away too much of the plot suffice it to say that a wrongful arrest and conviction shatter the lives of the couple at its center, exposing the cracks in the foundation of their relationship and creating new ones where none existed before. I found myself in that zone readers yearn for: I wanted to cancel all my plans and curl up with my new friends. After the first few chapters, as I got to know Roy and Celestial and Andre, I forgot they were fictional characters. In the case of Tayari Jones's fourth novel, An American Marriage (Algonquin), the answer to that last question was an emphatic yes. Where will it take me? Who will I meet along the way? What will I learn about the world and my place in it? And best of all, will I love it so much I'll want to choose it for my book club? Whenever I open a book, I'm embarking on an adventure.
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