Well, some of you are ready to hang Grant for what he did in the past and what he's doing now. To me this is a love story about a man determined to save his wife from being transferred to the second floor of the Meadowlake Home where those patients had disturbed minds and were bedridden. Which meant to him that Fiona would go down even faster.
Remember, in the beginning paragraph, after he has agreed to marry her, he knew that he wanted never be away from her. She had the spark of life. [/b]
So after he went to see Marian, whom he had seen in the parking lot of Meadowlake taking out Aubrey's wheelchair, he agreed to go to the dance knowing that more would occur, and it would become the solution for keeping Fiona on the first floor. He does think that he might enjoy Marian with her crepe skin, darkened to the color of a walnut. Well, he must save Fiona and also he must save himself.
Grant doesn't want Fiona laying about in a bed on the 2nd floor if he can prevent it by bringing Aubrey to visit. This way he might see more of her before the inevitable loss of memory.
JoanP,
I am going to look in my library for the movie. Is it new?
JudeS,
My reaction was exactly like yours. That's why I read it twice. I do think its a love story of kind
and I will confess when I agreed to read Alice Munro, I mixed her up with another Alice, Alice
Hoffman, whose books are humorous.
Barbara St A,
I liked your description of the whole story but hope its not true. Men are always going to have an egotistical bent in their lives but I certainly hope that the women of today are not thought of as property.
Having said that,
, how many times have you been asked while registering anywhere if you are retired? My pat answer is that women don't always get to retire. They still seem to be the homemaker in the marriage. Although some of us would cry "no" to that statement, I just don't agree with them. Its those little things that we still do, that most men never think of. The planning of meals, the making of grocery list, buying the husband's unmentionables, sometimes even his shoes. I have a young friend, mother of three children, who has a very well paying job with a bank and her husband travels often. Who do you think is in charge there?? Enuf!' already!