About this ebook
INSTANT NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER
“Lily King has written another masterpiece. This book overflows with her brilliance and her heart. We are so lucky.” —Emma Straub, New York Times bestselling author of This Time Tomorrow
From the New York Times bestselling author of Writers & Lovers comes a magnificent and intimate new novel of desire, friendship, and the lasting impact of first love
You knew I’d write a book about you someday.
Our narrator understands good love stories—their secrets and subtext, their highs and free falls. But her greatest love story, the one she lived, never followed the simple rules.
In the fall of her senior year of college, she meets two star students from her 17th-Century Lit class: Sam and Yash. Best friends living off campus in the elegant house of a professor on sabbatical, the boys invite her into their intoxicating world of academic fervor, rapid-fire banter and raucous card games. They nickname her Jordan, and she quickly discovers the pleasures of friendship, love and her own intellectual ambition. But youthful passion is unpredictable, and soon she finds herself at the center of a charged and intricate triangle. As graduation comes and goes, choices made will alter these three lives forever.
Decades later, the vulnerable days of Jordan's youth seem comfortably behind her. But when a surprise visit and unexpected news bring the past crashing into the present, she returns to a world she left behind and must confront the decisions and deceptions of her younger self.
Written with the superb wit and emotional sensitivity fans and critics of Lily King have come to adore, Heart the Lover is a deeply moving love story that celebrates literature, forgiveness, and the transformative bonds that shape our lives. Wise, unforgettable, and with a delightful connective thread to Writers & Lovers, this is King at her very best, affirming her as a masterful chronicler of the human experience and one of the finest novelists at work today.
Lily King
LILY KING is The New York Times bestselling author of five novels: The Pleasing Hour (1999), The English Teacher (2005), Father of the Rain (2010), Euphoria (2014), and Writers & Lovers (2020). Her first story collection, Five Tuesdays in Winter, was published in 2021. Her work has won numerous prizes and awards, including the Kirkus Prize, the New England Book Award for Fiction (twice), The Maine Fiction Award (twice), a Whiting Award, and the B&N Discover Award. She has been a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and an alternate for the PEN/Hemingway. Lily lives in Portland, Maine.
Read more from Lily King
Euphoria Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The English Teacher Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Writers & Lovers: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Pleasing Hour Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5Father of the Rain: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Five Tuesdays in Winter Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Heart the Lover
4 ratings1 review
- Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Oct 16, 2025
This was one of my most anticipated books of the year, and it was a disappointment. The writing was beautiful, and I liked the characters. But the book felt hollow and incomplete. It felt like navigating with a map that has holes in it.
Book preview
Heart the Lover - Lily King
Heart
the
Lover
Also by Lily King
Five Tuesdays in Winter
Writers & Lovers
Euphoria
Father of the Rain
The English Teacher
The Pleasing Hour
Heart
the
Lover
LILY KING
Grove Press
New York
Copyright © 2025 by Lily King
Jacket design by Amanda Hudson
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Scanning, uploading, and electronic distribution of this book or the facilitation of such without the permission of the publisher is prohibited. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated. Any member of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or anthology, should send inquiries to Grove Atlantic, 154 West 14th Street, New York, NY 10011 or permissions@groveatlantic.com.
Author’s note: The fictional story The Last Fall
is inspired by David Updike’s beautiful short story Bachelor of Arts.
Many thanks to Michael Goldfinger for medical advice, and to everyone in my life for their love and kindness.
Any use of this publication to train generative artificial intelligence (AI
) technologies is expressly prohibited. The author and publisher reserve all rights to license uses of this work for generative AI training and development of machine learning language models.
first edition
By Céline, translated by Ralph Manheim, from Journey to the End of the Night, copyright © 1934, 1952 by Louis-Ferdinand Céline, Translation copyright © 1983 Ralph Manheim. Reprinted by permission of New Directions Publishing Corp. and Alma Classics.
Printed in the United States of America
This book was typeset in 11.5-pt. Bembo by Alpha Design & Composition of Pittsfield, NH.
First Grove Atlantic hardcover edition: October 2025
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication data is available for this title.
ISBN 978-0-8021-6517-6
eISBN 978-0-8021-6518-3
Grove Press
an imprint of Grove Atlantic
154 West 14th Street
New York, NY 10011
Distributed by Publishers Group West
groveatlantic.com
For Tyler, Calla, and Eloise,
loves of my heart
I
Y
ou knew I’d write a book about you someday. You said once that I’d dredged up the whole hit parade minus you.
I’ll never know how you’d tell it.
For me it begins here. Like this.
T
he professor is holding up two neon-orange pieces of paper.
‘Despite its vulgar packaging,’ he says, waving a page in each hand like a flagman at Daytona, ‘I feel compelled to read this one aloud.’
The assignment had been to write a contemporary version of Bacon’s essay ‘History of Life and Death.’ I’d waited till the last minute to write it. The only paper we had in the house was this thick stuff left over from our Halloween party. And it wasn’t easy, feeding that cardstock into my typewriter.
The professor doesn’t read it as much as perform it. He gives it far more life and humor than I imagined it had.
There are two smart guys in the class. They sit up front together and I see only the backs of their heads, one with coppery brown hair and the other with a thick black ponytail. The professor runs things by them so often I assume they’re his grad school TAs. When my essay gets passed back to me, they both turn to watch where it goes.
After that day, the copper-haired one begins migrating back. Three classes later, he takes a seat beside me.
Soon he is walking me across campus to Modern Furniture, the only art history class that wasn’t full by the time I signed up. Our seventeenth-century lit class has only about thirty people, but Modern Furniture is held in an auditorium with cushioned seats set on a steep slope down to the professor at his podium. Behind him is a big screen that flashes pictures of Corbusier’s B 306 chaise longue and Bauhaus nesting tables. I catch up on a lot of sleep in that class.
Sam has short halting steps and speaks in fits and starts too, little articulate bursts then a good bit of silence. We talk exclusively about the class.
‘He’s not focusing enough on Cromwell,’ he says, ‘and how resistance to him galvanized the imagination of this whole generation of writers.’
I agree. What else can I do? I am a mere student, and he is a scholar. That much is clear right away. I’ve never met a scholar who wasn’t a professor. And Sam isn’t even a grad student. He’s a senior, like me.
Later I go to the library and read about who Cromwell was, and the next time we walk to Modern Furniture I make a very small joke about the Rump Parliament. Sam’s laugh is soundless, more like panting.
He asks me if I’ve seen The Deer Hunter and I say yes and I figure he’s going to make a comparison somehow with Venitore, the hunter, in The Compleat Angler. Instead he asks me if I want to see it again, with him. It’s playing on campus Friday night.
We meet at the Student Union. He’s already bought my ticket. They’ve set up rows of metal chairs and a screen on a stand. We sit and wait for the lights to go out. My roommate, Carson, passes us with her boyfriend, Bud, a Green Beret who drives up from Fort Bragg every chance he gets. They’re arguing as they sidestep to empty seats three rows ahead of us and then, once settled, start groping each other.
The movie starts. It is long and brutal. I have to look down into my lap for half of it. Sam sits like a stranger beside me. Finally they sing ‘God Bless America’ at the dinner table after Christopher Walken’s funeral, the frame freezes, and it is over. Sam gets up as soon as the credits roll, and I follow him out of the Student Union.
We head down a campus path that isn’t in the direction of my room on Pye Street or toward town, where I thought we might get a drink. He points out his dorm from freshman year and I point out mine the next quad over. The movie has made these buildings, these quads, these years of our lives seem unbearably naïve. I want to say something about it, but that feels naïve, too. Instead I start to say that I have to get up early and he asks if I’d like to get a beer.
We walk toward the bars, but he veers onto a side street then through the gate of a white fence and up a stepping-stone path to a front door lit by an overhead light.
‘Where are we?’
‘My house.’
I can tell he wanted to show it to me, knew it would be a draw.
It is.
He turns the knob—the house is unlocked—and holds the door open for me. I step into a small vestibule with steep stairs off to the left. To the right is a little table with a lamp and a pad of paper with a pen on top. Through an open door is a living room painted navy blue with a striped couch and a wall of books.
I remark on the number of books.
‘That’s just the overspill,’ he says. I follow him through the living room into a large study out of an old movie—four walls of floor-to-ceiling books, a big, thick-legged desk, and a leather chair before the fireplace.
‘Is this where you smoke your pipe in the evening?’
With a small smile he pulls open the top drawer of the table beside the leather chair to reveal four old pipes nestled neatly on a wooden rack.
I laugh and he pants.
‘Whose house is this?’
‘Dr. Gastrell’s. Did you ever have him for Chaucer? Or his seminar on Milton?’
I shake my head. I’ve heard of Gastrell before. ‘Gastric,’ people call him. Stay away, I’ve heard, he’s notoriously hard. Can undergrads actually take seminars?
‘He’s on sabbatical, doing research at Merton.’ He sees my lack of recognition. ‘At Oxford. He asked us to take care of the place for the year.’
‘Us?’
‘Yash and me.’
Yash?
There’s so much he expects me to know.
Neither of us is sure what to say after that. Sam shuts the drawer with the pipes and I ask where the bathroom is. He points to a sloped door beneath the stairs. I don’t really have to go. I just need to be alone for a minute. The toilet bowl is deep and the tiny bit I pee makes a loud sound when it hits the water, so I stop. The mirror above the sink is an oval fixed high on the wall. I can see half my forehead at a time, one eye or the other, if I stand on tiptoe.
The hallway is empty, the door out to the street a few steps away. In ten minutes I could be back in my room on Pye Street. But Carson and Bud will be there going at it in one way or another. A refrigerator opens and I follow the sound.
We sit with our bottles of beer on the striped couch in the navy room. Its cushions are stiff and we are stiff and he isn’t a guy who’s afraid of the long pause. We pick at our labels and speak sporadically. He asks if I have a lot of work this weekend and I say I have to write a short story.
‘Why?’
‘For my fiction class.’
He nods slowly, full of some thought he’s decided not to share. ‘What will you write about?’
I look around the room. ‘Tonight, probably.’
He looks alarmed. Then he pants. ‘Good one.’
The front door opens and slams against the wall.
‘Fucking fucking hell,’ says a voice from the hallway. The door shudders shut. ‘I’m locking it in case she followed me.’ A whoop-laugh. ‘You here? How was the daisy?’ He swings into the room, the other guy from our class. Yash. ‘Oh my. If she isn’t right here before us.’
His hair is out of its ponytail, thick and black, just past his shoulders. He is trying hard to stop laughing.
‘The daisy?’ I say.
‘Date, daisy,’ he says. ‘We call all our dates daisies. And my daisy tonight was a doozy.’ He smiles wide and comes closer. I glance at Sam, worried that he’s going to kick him out, but he’s got a little grin on his face I haven’t seen yet. He’s as relieved as I am that there are three of us now.
‘What happened?’ he says.
‘Well, I go and pick her up at Kappa,’ Yash says, standing in front of the coffee table facing us. Sam and I lean back at the same time, as if we’ve turned on a TV. ‘You have to sign in and give blood and take a vow of chastity and then you have to wait in a fucking parlor with doilies on all the tables for twenty minutes with all the other pathetic dudes. God, that guy Ian was there—the one who quoted Victor Hugo’s last words.’
Sam chuckles. ‘I see black light.’
‘I saw black light at Kappa for sure. It’s creepy in that room, and sort of smelly too, like if I get a whiff of my mother’s fingers, all the stuff she’s poked her fingers in during the day.’ He looks at me and jabs a finger in the air a few times. ‘My mother is a real poker,’ he says. ‘Finally we hear steps on the stairs and these girls all come down together and they look kind of alike and now none of us remember anymore who we’re taking out because we’ve been stuck in that playpen all night. However, someone identifies me from the lineup and we get the hell out of there. I take her to Pip’s, we talk about her father, who has some rare ghastly disease, and her brother, who sounds like an a-hole, and I order something that should have been called maroon glop over dirty sponge and bring her back to Kappa. She wants to show me something back in the playpen, which is now empty and very dimly lit, and I have to look at some god-awful Confederate musket on the wall, which she reveals belonged to her grandfather, and I head fast for the door, but her legs are suddenly ten feet long and she gets there first and presses me up against some coat hooks and unhinges her jaw like a snake. It was terrifying. I make a break and manage to get the screen door between us’—he holds up the imaginary door like a shield—‘and say goodnight politely and run.’
Sam is laughing so hard he makes sound.
Yash snorts and apologizes and wipes his eyes. He straightens up and wiggles his fingers at us. ‘I hope this is going a little better.’
‘It’s a little awkward,’ I say, and they both laugh.
‘It’ll get better. Sam is an acquired taste,’ he says. ‘Bonne nuit.’ And he clomps up the stairs.
Sam gets up and shuts both doors to the living room. When he sits back down on the couch, he’s closer.
‘The daisy? Please tell me not as in Daisy Buchanan.’
‘In a good way,’ he says, and kisses me.
On Monday Sam walks me to Modern Furniture, and when I get out fifty minutes later he’s waiting.
‘Want to come over for lunch?’
We eat turkey sandwiches and make out on the couch again. He doesn’t rush things. We kiss and kiss until I have to go to Logic.
I walk across campus a little lightheaded. I keep bursting out laughing, thinking about making out on Doc Gastric’s couch on a Monday in broad daylight. All the awkwardness dissolved when we were kissing. He said little things and I said little things and we made each other laugh on that striped couch.
Could he tell how little experience I’d had? Only one boyfriend so far, Jay, the year before. We met in the fall and I brought him home for spring break and fell out of love with him in my mother’s kitchen. I told him on the plane back to school, which is a terrible place to break up. He cried and thrashed around but wouldn’t get up and go to the bathroom to pull himself together. The conversation started quietly enough, with him saying what he often said to me, which was that I bottled up my feelings until they came out like a fire hose, that if I didn’t withhold so much we could reach each other better. But as he slowly realized that he wasn’t going to be able to talk me out of my decision, his recriminations got louder. He’d paid for our flights. He could have gone to Key West with his friends instead of a shitty town in Massachusetts. His mother thought I was lesbian. ‘I taught you everything I know about sex!’ he hollered all the way down the aisle into the cockpit, which had no door back then. It was true. He had. I’d been a virgin and he’d been a fun and loving guide. I’d had nothing to compare him or our sex to at the time, but now I know that he was particularly uninhibited and passed along that attitude to me. He did not like that now I was going to pass it along to someone else. He got very hung up on that fact. It was the longest flight of my life, and I was grateful when the wheels hit the runway and my freedom was near. After Jay, I made out with the bartender at the restaurant I worked at, with a guy at the senior pig roast at the start of the semester, and most recently with a friend of Carson’s who had also dressed up as Cyndi Lauper for our Halloween party.
Sam invites me for dinner on Friday. I imagine having
