Frank and April Wheeler have convinced themselves they are different from their suburban Connecticut neighbours — more intelligent, more alive, too good for the lives they are living. April proposes they move to Paris. Frank agrees. The plan unravels. Yates's debut novel is the most precise and merciless portrait of postwar American suburban conformity ever written.
The novel begins: 'Neither of the Grimes sisters would have a happy life, and looking back it always seemed that the trouble began with their parents' divorce.' Emily and Sarah Grimes grow up in Depression-era New York and move through postwar America — marriages, jobs, affairs, children — in separate but parallel patterns of disappointment. Yates's most compressed novel and possibly his finest.