Solstice
A Novel
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- 予約注文
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- リリース予定日:2026年8月4日
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- ¥2,000
発行者による作品情報
A brilliant but restless dancer discovers the true meaning of love and intimacy through the ebbs and flows of her marriage in this exquisitely written novel—from the bestselling author and psychologist whose feminist classic, In a Different Voice, revolutionized our understanding of women’s lives.
“A literary tour de force . . . an irresistible read.”—Daphne Merkin
“A remarkable work by a remarkable writer.”—Gish Jen
“A deeply felt narrative of a couple’s push-pull dynamic over decades.”—Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Boston, 1969. Eve, a dancer whose feelings are expressed through the body and movement, senses an inexplicable distance growing between herself and her husband, Gabe, a journalist and father of her two children. Feeling lost and alone, she begins an affair; Gabe detects it immediately and begins one himself. Yet somehow they find their way back to each other, and when Eve gives birth to a daughter, their marriage becomes vital again.
Years later, when Gabe returns from a reporting trip to the Middle East and Berlin, Eve again perceives something is wrong in her marriage. He has always had a darkness she could not fathom—deep psychological scars from his childhood, when Gabe escaped Nazi Germany on the Kindertransport.
Amsterdam, 1991. Newly separated from Gabe, Eve has accepted a fellowship to choreograph a dance inspired by the story of Adam and Eve. When a colleague introduces her to a new translation of the ancient text, Eve begins to redefine the way she thinks about women, men, and relationships—and, perhaps, to see another path back to her marriage.
In this emotionally riveting novel, Carol Gilligan draws on her unsurpassed psychological understanding of women's lives to explore a new vision of love and intimacy. Sweeping across decades and continents, Solstice is a provocative and profound portrait of what it takes to truly love another.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Gilligan, a psychologist primarily known for her theories on ethics and gender, follows her 2009 novel Kyra with a deeply felt narrative of a couple's push-pull dynamic over decades. In 1969 Boston, dancer and choreographer Eve marries Gabe, an intense and brooding journalist haunted by his childhood in Berlin, where his Jewish family was persecuted during the Holocaust. Since escaping from Germany via the Kindertransport, he has been searching for a sense of home. Together, the couple have two sons. As Gabe becomes absorbed in his work and less available emotionally, Eve falls into an affair. Gabe also has a fling, but he and Eve reconnect and have a daughter together. In 1991, however, they go their separate ways, and Eve takes off for a residency in Amsterdam choreographing a modern dance based on the biblical story of Adam and Eve. A rabbi helps her interpret the original text, and she sees the story in a startling new light. Gilligan crafts luminous depictions of bodies in motion together, in harmony and in opposition, and shows how Eve experiences and expresses emotions through physicality and movement. This artful novel is both cosmopolitan and exquisitely intimate.