Unequal Loves is a luminous meditation on love, memory, and the quiet devastations of time.
A middle-aged man journeys through Japan with his wife, drifting between Kyoto’s hushed temples and Tokyo’s incandescent streets, while traversing the more elusive terrain of his own restless mind. Encounters with art, literature, and fleeting strangers awaken buried desires and long-dormant regrets, pulling him into a reckoning with the ghosts of youthful passion, lost friendships, and the fragile intoxication of beauty glimpsed in passing.
With prose that is both precise and tender, Xavier Hennekinne captures the ache of nostalgia and the gravity of the present. Unequal Loves is a profound and atmospheric novel, unafraid to linger in the silences between people, the impermanence of connection, and the bittersweet shimmer of what we almost had.
Praise for Unequal Loves
‘An unsparing reflection on the formative influence of desire. I felt great tenderness for the boy at the heart of the man.’
— Julia Leigh, award-winning novelist and filmmaker