Seduction Theory by Emily Adrian

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Seduction Theory by Emily Adrian

Literary fiction

Seduction Theory

by Emily Adrian

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Quick take

Struggling with your MFA thesis? Just fictionalize your advisor’s real-life marriage issues (and enjoy the fallout).

Good to know

  • Illustrated icon, Love_Triangle

    Love triangle

  • Illustrated icon, Salacious

    Salacious

  • Illustrated icon, Marriage_Issues

    Marriage issues

  • Illustrated icon, Academic

    Academic

Synopsis

Simone is the star of Edwards University’s creative writing renowned Woolf scholar, grief memoirist, and campus sex icon. Her less glamorous and ostensibly devoted husband, Ethan, is a forgotten novelist and lecturer in the same department. But when Ethan and the department administrative assistant Abigail have sex, Simone and Ethan’s faith in their flawless marriage is rattled.

Simone has secrets of her own. While Ethan’s away for the summer, she becomes inordinately close with her advisee, graduate student Roberta “Robbie” Green. In Robbie, Simone finds a new running partner, confidante, and disciple—or so she believes. Behind Simone’s back, Robbie fictionalizes her mentor’s marriage in a breathtakingly invasive MFA thesis. Determined to tell her version of the story, Robbie paints a revealing portrait of Simone, Ethan, Abigail, and even herself, scratching at the very surface of what may—or may not—be the truth.

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Get an early look from the first pages of Seduction Theory.

Seduction Theory

CHAPTER ONE

At the creative writing department’s end-of-year party, Ethan’s secretary fed him kale with her fingers. Ethan wasn’t supposed to call Abigail his secretary. Trouble was, Abigail often referred to herself as his secretary in wry subversion of the school’s progressive values, and her jokes had eclipsed her actual job title in Ethan’s memory. The party was crowded. Grad students were crammed into the kitchen, hoping their advisors heard them talking about sex. In the adjacent living room, academic spouses grew weary of discussing summer plans, as if everyone had summers off. Soon the house would overheat. Guests would spill into the yard but for now stayed close to the collapsible buffet table on which they’d placed their offerings. ‘I brought the kale salad,” said Abigail, who was not attractive but to whom Ethan was attracted. He’d formed a habit of fixating on her least appealing features, her crusty eyelashes and fleshy earlobes, daring his lust to subside, which it did not.

“I’m not a fan of that vegetable,” he admitted.

“Oh, I massaged it. Have you ever had it massaged?” She looked deep into his eyes with an intensity that might have indicated sexual devotion but was not uncommon in the type of person by whom Ethan found himself daily surrounded.

“I’m not sure. I mean, I don’t know how it’s usually prepared.”

She stuck an arm between two adjuncts and grabbed a fistful of her own salad. She was drunk. He was excited.

Abigail shoved the greens through Ethan’s closed lips. Oh, they were terrible. Coarse and curled and bitter, gritty with some kind of debris. “Are there nuts in this?” he asked.

“Quinoa.”

“Ah,” he said, chewing indefinitely. “That is different.”

Pleased, she drank her drink. Ethan stood ass-to-ass with party host and department chair Joyce Lockhart, who was engaged in a separate conversation. “We adopted him when he was seven,” Joyce was saying. “He was called Humphrey on his papers, which, no. Then we discovered he hates females his own age but loves puppies, so we named him Humbert!” Temperate laughter. Someone’s sandalwood perfume. “Lola” by the Kinks.

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Read this if you like...


Relationships that are very, very messy—we’re talking inter-office affairs, blurred boundaries, and midlife marriages on the brink.


Untrustworthy narrators and cleverly-constructed storylines that make you question what’s real and are more than a little provocative.


Brilliant, irreverent send-ups of academia and modern life, interwoven with astute observations on the human desire for love and connection.

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Seduction Theory
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Seduction Theory
Immortal Consequences
Forget Me Not
All the Tomorrows After
The Man No One Believed