On receiving the very thing she wants—a divorce and the power to sell
their house—over which they have fought the past year—Anna Manning
learns that Edward, her soon-to-be ex-husband is dying from cancer.
A faithful wife for three decades, and stay-at-home mother of four
children, Anna endured Edward’s constant absence due to travel for his
international real estate firm and numerous extra-marital affairs. With
their children now adults, Edward has less than six months, possibly
three, to live.
Anna takes him home to die in the house she has fought so vigorously
to sell. But letting go of someone who has caused so much pain in your
life doesn’t come easily. Edward has changed. There are Anna and
Edward’s four children, three of whom who are married and struggling to
endow their families with meaning and purpose.
There is also Inman who loves Anna, and gives the one thing Edward
denied her—passion and intimacy. And lastly there is Anna. An art
history major turned wife and mother out of college, she had planned on
divorcing Edward and with her proceeds from the sale of the house move
to France. Anna would visit and study the works in Europe’s famous
museums—perhaps work as a docent in one.
News of Edward’s terminal illness provokes her to understand the
present, rooted in a wellspring of the past and pouring into a future
without him.
The House shows what happens when one
adopts the belief that: All hold regret and are seeking forgiveness. Our
salvation rests in the hands of others—most particularly the ones we
love, and who have treated us wrongly.
The House Book Trailer