Mating for Life
CBC Books | CBC | Posted: March 8, 2017 5:55 PM | Last Updated: June 23, 2017
Marissa Stapley
Former folk singer Helen Sear was a feminist wild child, raising three daughters, Liane, Ilsa and Fiona (each by different fathers) largely on her own. Now in her sixties, Helen has fallen in love with a traditional man who desperately wants to marry her — and while she's fearful of losing him, she's equally afraid she'll betray everything she's ever stood for if she goes through with it.
Her youngest daughter, Liane, is in the heady early days of a relationship with the love of her life. But he has an ex-wife and two daughters — and her new role as "step-something" doesn't come with an instruction manual. Ilsa, an artist, is fervently hoping her second marriage will stick. Yet her world feels like it is slowly shrinking, and she realizes she may need to break free again, even if it means disrupting the lives of her two young children. And then there's Fiona, the eldest sister, who discovers her husband has been harbouring a huge secret, which makes her own past harder to ignore. To regain stability, she must face some hard truths and alter her impossibly high expectations. (From Simon & Schuster Canada)
From the book
Her plan: to swim and eat salads (mostly because she hated to cook, or couldn't cook; it was a chicken/egg situation she didn't care to analyze) and work on the final pages of her thesis. By the end of the week, when Liane's mother and sisters arrived for their annual early summer cottage weekend, she would have finished it. Then Adam would stop asking her when she was going to finish it and she would stop feeling guilty for not responding in a more appropriately proactive way to his father's offer of a job on the faculty at the university, as a teaching assistant, pending her thesis defense.
From Mating for Life by Marissa Stapley ©2014. Published by Simon & Schuster Canada.