Fates and Furies by Lauren Groff

Fates and Furies, Lauren Groff’s novel on the Longlist for the National Book Award, begins with a honeymoon and ends with a wedding. It’s a narrative choice that would feel overly sentimental if it weren’t for the dark exploration of marriage that rests between these two events. For Lotto and Mathilde, the main characters in the decades-spanning story, marriage is not overly idealized or cloyingly romantic. Instead, it’s a safe harbor for two people desiring to escape the past.
Lotto is a golden boy of the Vassar theater, blessed with privilege and a magnetic charm. Mathilde is an enigmatic classmate with no friends, no family and a look described as “odd,” but she immediately wins Lotto’s heart. At a cast party shortly before graduation, Lotto drops to one knee and asks Mathilde to marry him—even before he knows her name. Two weeks later, they are husband and wife.
Groff doesn’t play their youthful, spontaneous marriage for drama. Although their friends are convinced it won’t last, Mathilde and Lotto find something in one another that they desperately need. Together they grow up, struggling to pay the bills after Lotto is disinherited by his irate mother in an act of protest against their marriage. But Lotto finally finds success as a playwright, and the couple begins the slow climb to comfort.