The Berynes are a middle-class family: Charlam, the grandfather, who wants to take control after the death of his son, Georges, in a road accident; Sabine, his daughter-in-law, who mutely but successfully wards off his encroachment; the three sons, who seem relatively unaffected by the loss of their father and who make their own way in life, sometimes to Charlam's approval, sometimes to his disapproval; Marie, the daughter, whose leg was damaged in the accident; Edith, the aunt, whose undiscovered secret is her passion for her nephew, Georges; and Pierre, whom Sabine chances to encounter; Mr. Loyalty, the man she can rely on in her business and who becomes a kind of honorary uncle to the children, much to the disgust of Charlam. But that is merely the surface. What gives this novel its special flavour are the things unseen, the magma of hopes, desires, fantasies, memories, humiliations, passions and hatreds bubbling beneath the surface of all their lives, which Sylvie Germain evokes with the poetic intensity that distinguishes her novels. AUTHOR: Sylvie Germain was born in Chateauroux in Central France in 1954. She is the author of thirteen works of fiction as well as a study of the painter Vermeer and a religious meditation. Her work has been translated into twenty-two languages and has won many literary prizes and received world-wide acclaim.