Opposites attract, and Helmut Holk and Christine Arne, the appealing  married couple at the center of this engrossing book by one of Germany’s  greatest novelists, could not be less alike. Christine is a serious  soul from a devout background. She is brooding and beautiful and devoted  to her husband and their two children. Helmut is lighthearted and  pleasure-loving and largely content to defer to his wife’s deeper  feelings and better wisdom. They live in a beautiful large house  overlooking the sea, which they built themselves, and have been happily  married for twenty-three years—only of late a certain tension has crept  into their dealings with each other. Little jokes, casual endearments,  long-meditated plans: they all hit a raw nerve. 
 How a couple can slowly drift apart, until one day they find  themselves in a situation which is nothing they ever wished for but from  which they cannot go back, is at the heart of this timeless story of  everyday life. Theodor Fontane’s great gift is to tell the story  effectively in his characters’ own words, listening to how they talk and  fail to talk to each other, watching them turn away from their own true  feelings as much as from each other. Irretrievable is a nuanced, affectionate, enormously sophisticated, and profoundly humane reckoning with the blindness of love.
