One of the most haunting and frightening book I've ever read. Of all the literary genres, the novella is my favorite, and in this one, every word is strictly necessary, just as it should be. It is the story of 2 cousins, Angel and Lara, who belong to a moneyed Manhattan family. The shy one, Angel, wrote some poetry as a child, and ever since has been considered "a poet" by her relatives, although she is quite incapable of writing anything of significance. Similarly, Lara, who is very beautiful, showed some inclination for dancing in childhood, and was dubbed "the dancer". But Lara is actually a narcissist, who only enjoys being the centre of attention. When it becomes clear in her early twenties that in fact, she is not particularly gifted either for dancing or for acting, she quickly gives everything up, and starts an affair with Angel's father, who is no longer married to her aunt. In spite of this, Angel, who is much more deeply in love with Lara than her father is, begins to look after her, as Lara's behavior becomes increasingly erratic. Lara's tragedy is that she cannot thrive unless she attracts everybody's admiration, and the paucity of her gifts makes that less and less forthcoming. Angel gives up everything in order to protect Lara, but by so doing she also becomes complicit in Lara's downfall, because what Lara needs is serious medical help. As is often the case in such circumstances, the whole family is in fact complicit, since even when disaster stares them in the face, nobody takes action, having other fish to fry. It's one of those stories where most everybody behaves a little bit shabbily, if not atrociously. The cousins also come into contact with various people from the under-privileged class, a cab driver who swears he'll turn into a proper carpenter once he gets a bit of money, and a Polish woman who minds Angel's grand-mother at some point. Both these characters, "through no fault you could call their own", as they are at pains to explain, have had dealings with the police. Amazingly, in such a short novel, Jhabvala has time to look at how the other half lives, and shows great compassion for the have-nots who she clearly thinks stand no chance of ever making it in today's America. While showing great compassion for these characters, she nonetheless exposes them as being as self-deluding and deceitful as anybody else. For instance. the Polish maid has almost managed to convince herself that her employer gave her the jewelry that, in fact, she stole from her when she was too feeble to notice. Eventually, Angel, unable to protect Lara from her own demons, gives everything up too: "Her principal feeling was that a great promise had been made and broken, although it was not clear whether she herself had made and broken it, or whether this had been done to her."