โ€˜Unforgivable Loveโ€™ by Sophfronia Scott
c.2017, Wm. Morrow
$15.99 ($19.99 Canada)
516 pages

You know how to use a hammer.

Itโ€™s not that hard: just grab the end and swing. Easy enough โ€” in fact, there are probably lots of tools you know how to use, although, as in the new novel โ€œUnforgivable Loveโ€ by Sophfronia Scott, do you know how to use people?

Absolutely nobody ever said โ€œnoโ€ to Mae Malveaux.

Young, beautiful, wealthy, and widowed, Mae ruled Harlem society with a silky hammer, surrounding herself with carefully chosen sycophants and moneyed men who hoped Mae might fall in love with them.

Mae wanted love, thatโ€™s true. But she wanted it her way โ€” which is why she was angry when she saw her former lover, Frank Washington, in a nightclub she considered her domain. How dare he? She was even angrier when she learned that he planned to marry her cousinโ€™s virginal daughter, Cecily. Mae seethed, until she noticed that Valiant Jackson had walked into the club, too.

Of all the men sheโ€™d ever had, Mae considered Val her equal. He wasnโ€™t as smart, but he was every bit as devious as she, and he loved a good game. On the spot, Mae cooked up a scheme and promised Val that he could have what heโ€™d always wanted, in exchange for revenge on Frank. What Val wanted was Mae.

But she wasnโ€™t the only woman Val had his sights set on. Elizabeth Townsend, a friend of Valโ€™s Aunt Rose, seemed to be the challenge he craved; Elizabeth was beautiful, pious and straight-laced, and was passing time at Roseโ€™s house while awaiting the return of her lawyer-husband.

Val knew she was wedded, but could she be bedded? He thought so.

But could Elizabeth be distracted while Val seduced Cecily โ€” or, at least, while he waited for Maeโ€™s latest young lover to seduce Cecily for him? It would all hinge on secrets kept, but the outcome would be a win-win for both Mae and Val.

And that was fine with Mae. She loved those kinds of schemes.

Destroying people was one of her better talentsโ€ฆ

Obviously, the very first thing youโ€™re going to notice about โ€œUnforgivable Loveโ€ when you see it is its 500-plus-page heft. Itโ€™s a big book and yes, itโ€™s wordy sometimes, but donโ€™t let that scare you off. This is a great story.

Based loosely on a book first published in 1782, but set mostly in Harlem in the post-World War II years, this novel offers readers some shockers, right from the outset, when we see from where the character Maeโ€™s nastiness sprang. Author Sophfronia Scott takes the tale up from there, in twisty turns that include a huge cast thatโ€™s surprisingly easy to keep track of, despite the numbers. Add in a background soundtrack of big-band music and a whiff of gin and cigar smoke, and youโ€™ve got a rich, multilayered novel youโ€™ll love peeling apart.

Now, admittedly, that may be a slow peel at times, but sticking with it has its rewards.

In the end, โ€œUnforgivable Loveโ€ is a very good use of your time.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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