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The Confession

2019 | Fiction & Poetry

Jessie Burton’s latest novel tells the story of three women and the complex connections they have shared across decades and continents. This is a novel about love, sex, work, motherhood, how we construct our pasts and dream our futures, and the wildly divergent paths our lives can take.



Published by Picador

Edition Hardcover
ISBN 9781509886142
Language English

Main Image Courtesy: panmacmillan.com.
Images And Data Courtesy Of: Picador.
This content (including text, images, videos and other media) is published and used in accordance with Fair Use.

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Erika

Added this item on Feb 27, 2019

The Confession Reviews & Ratings (2)
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ClareR (5906 KP) rated

Jun 13, 2021  
The Confession
The Confession
Jessie Burton | 2019 | Fiction & Poetry
8
8.0 (2 Ratings)
Book Rating
The Confession centres around three women in different times: it’s the 1980’s, and Elise meets writer Constance. So begins an intense relationship between the two women. When Constance’s new book is bought by a studio and they start to film, Constance takes Elise and goes over to watch her novel become a film. It’s a very different life to Hampstead, and Elise struggles.

We meet our third protagonist, Rosie Simmons, in 2017. She lives in London with her boyfriend, and she’s starting to question their relationship. She seems very discontented with her life in general, and this is perhaps partly because she never knew her mother. Her father, Matt, never talks about her. However, during a visit to France where her father lives, he tells her about the woman that her mother had once lived with: Constance Holden.

When Rosie returns to London, she decides to find out more about Constance. And through a set of strange circumstances, Rosie becomes Constance’s assistant - under another name.

I did wonder how Rosie was eventually going to explain her way out of the situation she had got herself in to, and the resolution didn’t disappoint me. I was completely enthralled by this book: the complicated relationships, the love of both parents and lovers, and the strong women, all made this a really satisfying read for me. A recommended read!
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