Providence
A Novel
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
An introverted English professor's quiet life gets turned upside down when he falls for a dangerous, enigmatic sophomore.
Mark Lausson has everything he thought he wanted: a coveted job at elite Sawyer College in Ohio. But at the start of his second year, stuck in a small town with deadlines piling up and paychecks falling short, Mark can already feel the fantasy crumbling. And then, a few weeks in, sophomore Tyler Cunningham shows up in class. In Tyler—confident, mysterious, and popular—Mark glimpses another way of being in the world. He finds Tyler’s self-possession both compelling and unsettling. Caught in the rush of sex and secrets, Mark ignores the increasing evidence that Tyler can’t be trusted. But by the time Mark comes to his senses, the irreparable damage is done. Complicating easy ideas of innocence, Providence explores the ways loneliness and desire distort our senses of self and other, right and wrong.
Intense, propulsive, and impossible to put down, Providence is perfect for readers of P. J. Vernon’s Bath Haus and Donna Tartt’s The Secret History, as well as Patricia Highsmith’s Talented Mr. Ripley and Garth Greenwell’s What Belongs to You.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Willse debuts with a consuming psychological thriller that turns familiar tropes of dark academia and fatal attraction on their heads. Self-conscious 30-something English professor Mark Lausson spends his days teaching at Ohio's prestigious and insular Sawyer College, and his nights compiling a book about gay murderers in history and pop culture. He has a best friend in the humanities department and a doting boyfriend in math, but they're not enough to shake his gnawing malaise. Then chiseled sophomore Tyler Cunningham speaks up in a class discussion on The Talented Mr. Ripley, and Mark's life begins a sweat-soaked doom spiral. Captivated by—and jealous of—Tyler's self-possession, Mark initiates a whirlwind affair and becomes increasingly obsessed with Tyler as the sophomore's behavior turns more and more reckless and suspect. When the specifics of Tyler's relationship to his blue-blooded roommate, Addison, click into view, the powder keg explodes, and Mark is left to pick up the pieces. Willse expertly renders Mark's aimlessness, establishing fertile ground for his obsession with Tyler to take root, and brings a shrewd, patient approach to the unfolding of their affair. Well-developed themes of class and self-misperception (echoing those in Rebecca Makkai's I Have Some Questions for You) make up for the somewhat rushed ending. The result is a memorable, steamy, and accomplished queer thriller.