released The Foursome. Published in more than forty countries, her novels have received the New England Prize for Fiction, the Maine Literary Award, and a Barnes & Noble Discover Award, among others, and have been chosen by hundreds of communities, schools, and universities as “One Book” selections.
Kline applied the Page 69 Test to The Foursome with the following results:
Page 69 of my new novel The Foursome contains only a few lines of dialogue, but it cuts straight to the heart of the novel.Visit Christina Baker Kline's website.
Sallie Yates is on the porch with her father, who is trying to dissuade her from marrying Eng Bunker, one of the world-famous conjoined twins. He wants her to choose an easier life, or at least a more conventional one. Her sister Addie is already entangled in the same extraordinary arrangement with Eng’s brother, Chang.
Their father has tried reason, tried offering alternatives — a trip to Charleston, the promise of a "normal" young man with prospects. Now he's out of strategies, and what surfaces instead is something more honest: his thoughts about his own flawed marriage. When Sallie questions him, he answers, “Happiness is relative, Sallie. I sought security. Respectability. I have those things.”
That sentence could stand as one of the novel’s central questions. What do people choose freely, and what do they accept because the world has narrowed around them? What is the difference between love, duty, ambition, and accommodation? In nineteenth-century North Carolina, especially for women, marriage was rarely a simple matter of the heart. It was bound up with property, family reputation, social standing, and survival.
Page 69 doesn’t show anything about the spectacle surrounding Chang and Eng, or the sweep of the Civil War years to come. It is an intimate scene, a father warning his daughter against a life he cannot imagine, even as his own life has been shaped by compromise. “The road you’re considering – I fear where it leads,” he tells her.
He’s not entirely wrong. But neither is Sallie.
She hasn't said yes to anything yet. She's still in the space between curiosity and commitment. Her father's warning isn't villainous or unreasonable — it comes from love, and from his own experience of settling. But it also reveals the limits of his imagination. He cannot conceive of a life outside the narrow bounds of what their community considers acceptable.
The Foursome lives in these charged, quiet moments: two people on a porch, not quite saying what they mean, the real conversation happening underneath the words. The novel spans five decades, but its engine is the small negotiations of loyalty, desire, and self-knowledge that happen inside families, behind closed doors, in the silence between what's spoken aloud and what's left unsaid.
Coffee with a Canine: Christina Baker Kline & Lucy.
The Page 69 Test: Bird in Hand.
Writers Read: Christina Baker Kline (March 2017).
--Marshal Zeringue


