**From the bestselling, Booker Prize-winning author of The Sense of an
Ending comes "a brilliant, rueful look at love--what we do for it, how
we experience it and what makes it die" (People).
**
One summer in the sixties, in a staid suburb south of London,
nineteen-year-old Paul comes home from university and is urged by his
mother to join the tennis club. There he's partnered with Susan Macleod,
a fine player who's forty-eight, confident, witty, and married, with two
nearly adult daughters. She is a warm companion, her bond with Paul
immediate. And soon, inevitably, they are lovers.
Basking in the glow of one another, they set up house together in
London. Decades later, Paul looks back at how they fell in love and
how--gradually, relentlessly--everything fell apart. As he turns over
his only story in his mind, examining it from different vantage points,
he finds himself confronted with the contradictions and slips of his own
memory--and the ways in which our narratives and our lives shape one
another. Poignant, vivid and profound, The Only Story is a searing
novel of memory, devotion, and how first love fixes a life forever.