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Dude finds out about his wife's affair in her memoir

Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:08 am
Posted by prplhze2000
Parts Unknown
Member since Jan 2007
57924 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:08 am
Author was married to another author. They agreed not to read each other's stuff while they were married. They were married 40 years, two kids, published 20 books between them. After so many decades, he finally read her memoir. John Skoyles wrote:

The Free Press

quote:

So when my wife announced that she finished a new memoir (she had written several), I didn’t read it. As was her custom, she sent the manuscript to her two closest friends, and both advised against publishing it. A well-known writer, who she asked for a blurb, answered with a paragraph so bland as to be useless.

She seemed unfazed, but I was puzzled and asked her about the book. She said it dealt with her mother, who’d been dead for 22 years, instructing her on how to use her “womanly wiles.”


Uh-huh. Poor schmuck. But give the boy credit, he didn't cuck out.

quote:

Then the book was published and the reviews appeared. That’s when I understood why her friends had advised her against publishing it. “This breathtaking memoir reveals an illicit affair with her longtime New York editor,” read one. Another noted her “lengthy adulterous affair.”

I was stunned. I couldn’t believe it and hoped that she had fictionalized the relationship, perhaps creating a hybrid of invention, exaggeration, and fact. As I was reading the reviews, a close friend called saying all I needed to know was one sentence: “I meet him in hotel rooms for 15 years.”

So it was true. Why had she done this? First, why had she had the affair, and second, why had she documented it and distributed it to the world without a second thought to me, our life, and our family?

I vividly recall the moment I confronted her. She was in the kitchen, filling hummingbird feeders with sugar water. I read the reviews aloud. She turned from her task and said she loved me. She said the affair meant nothing, that it was a fling.

I said that 15 years is not “a fling.”


In short, he moved out to read the book. out even though he was 71 and she was 68. He couldn't read the book with her in the same house. Divorce followed.

quote:

Even as papers were being signed, she sent a text message: “Do you think we can make it work, after all these years?”

All these years. I still feel the power of those words five years after our divorce, but I didn’t change my mind.


He talks about the pain and how he recovered afterwards.



Posted by Chad504boy
4 posts
Member since Feb 2005
178145 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:09 am to
TL;DR

Should have been his motto
Posted by RohanGonzales
Pronoun: Whatever
Member since Apr 2024
9976 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:12 am to
Don't ask that guy for relationship advice.

although he did please his wife for years by staying the frick out of the way
Posted by 844_Tiger
Down_Under
Member since Jul 2021
579 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:14 am to
100% chance she blames him for her affair.
Posted by shutterspeed
MS Gulf Coast
Member since May 2007
72108 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:20 am to
He was in a poly relationship. He just didn't know it.
Posted by Stexas
SWLA
Member since May 2013
6970 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:28 am to
I can’t believe this is real. Surely the dude would have some sense of another guy railing his wife for 15 years? I want to feel sorry for him but man.
Posted by Archives
Member since Mar 2026
125 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:31 am to
I'm imagining this victimized author was secretly gay and probably suspected things, but didn't really care.
Posted by UKWildcats
Lexington, KY
Member since Mar 2015
19711 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:34 am to
While I feel bad for the guy, based on how he talks in those posted excerpts, he sounds like a soft little bitch, and even liberal women (let's be real.....these are two married authors...you know damn well they're liberal) biologically want a real man who takes command and acts like a fricking man. She found that elsewhere. Him being an effeminate bitch doesn't give her license to go around being a dirty common whore though.
This post was edited on 4/5/26 at 10:37 am
Posted by Arkapigdiesel
Faulkner County
Member since Jun 2009
15596 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:35 am to
Woman was probably taking loads to the face and getting her butt hole stretched out, but not letting the husband do that to her.

Women are just as big of whore's as us dudes.
Posted by Lou Loomis
A pond. Ponds good for you.
Member since Mar 2025
1786 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:36 am to
Dear Penthouse,

Seriously, can’t you distinguish between a real story and a fake one? This is the latter. I mean, c’mon man who writes multiple memoirs? That should have been one clue that it was fake.
This post was edited on 4/5/26 at 10:38 am
Posted by oldtrucker
Marianna, Fl
Member since Apr 2013
3450 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:38 am to
Sometimes it takes another to fulfill us. I doesn't mean you love your spouse less.
Posted by bad93ex
Walnut Cove
Member since Sep 2018
35728 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:41 am to
quote:

biologically want a real man who takes command and acts like a fricking man.


hence the rise of the Romantasy genre on the bestsellers list.



Book description:

quote:

Violet is a typical, down-on-her-luck millennial: mid-twenties, over-educated and drowning in debt, on the verge of moving into her parents' basement. When a lifeline appears in the form of a very unconventional job in neighboring Cambric Creek, she has no choice but to grab at it with both hands.

Morning Glory Milking Farm offers full-time hours, full benefits, and generous pay with no experience needed . . . there’s only one catch. The clientele is Grade A certified prime beef, with the manly, meaty endowments to match. Milking minotaurs isn’t something Violet ever considered as a career option, but she’s determined to turn the opportunity into a reversal of fortune.

When a stern, deep-voiced client begins to specially request her for his milking sessions, maintaining her professionalism and keeping him out of her dreams is easier said than done. Violet is resolved to make a dent in her student loans and afford name-brand orange juice, and a one-sided crush on an out-of-her-league minotaur is not a part of her plan—unless her feelings aren’t so one-sided after all.
Posted by blueboy
Member since Apr 2006
64971 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:44 am to
quote:

They were married 40 years, two kids,
Definitely tell the kids not to send their spit to 23 and Me. I doubt anything good could come from that.
Posted by CoachRay
Member since Jul 2019
168 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:45 am to
At least he has material for his next book.
Posted by billjamin
Houston
Member since Jun 2019
17700 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:48 am to
My ex MIL did something similar to my ex cuck-in-law but he didn’t leave.
Posted by prplhze2000
Parts Unknown
Member since Jan 2007
57924 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:48 am to
he is a poet and a writer. Like artists, they tend to be on the sensitive side.

In this case, she could pull it off for so long because they travel quite a bit. Publisher meetings, literary conferences, etc. If you read the article, she would do things like encourage him to take their son on a weekend outing (which would have set off flags with me after awhile).

To the other poster, the article is real. Her book is on Amazon. Her name is Maria Flook. The book is First Person Female.
Posted by sqerty
AP
Member since May 2022
8395 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 10:56 am to
quote:

"Flook’s oeuvre is unified by her subtly witty, deep dives into family dynamics, and forbidden sexual acts and desires."[3] Her 2018 memoir First Person Female was criticized by Kirkus for being "lurid";




Idiot shoulda read all of it, immediately.
Posted by John Casey
New Orleans
Member since Nov 2016
4006 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 11:01 am to
quote:

They agreed not to read each other's stuff while they were married


Should have been a HUGE red flag when I assume the wife approached the husband with this proposition.

Two authors and you don’t bounce ideas off each other or help each other edit?
Posted by suavecito80
Member since Apr 2014
3291 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 11:13 am to
quote:

100% chance she blames him for her affair.


Isn’t this always the case?
Posted by Big Fat Guy
Member since Nov 2020
1314 posts
Posted on 4/5/26 at 11:25 am to
In France they made it illegal to get a paternity test without a court order because of how many fathers were NOT the father. Do we think only French women cheat?

Cheating is nothing to women. 'Just a fling' = 15 years of forbidden / lurid sexual acts and desires.

How would you ever know? They are treacherous.

Lesbian divorce rates are the highest of all. Think about it.
This post was edited on 4/5/26 at 11:47 am
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