But the truth was that I didn't want to stay in Riley. The pulls of familial love and obligation could not, for the moment, compete with the promise of early-relationship sex. Starlight and beer and our twisting, naked bodies--that was what I wanted, not a seat at a dining room table with two old women eating breaded veal cutlets and Vienna torte.
by Curtis Sittenfeld
(0 Reviews)

The protagonist feels a deep conflict between her sense of duty to her family and her desire for excitement and intimacy in her new relationship. Despite the warmth of family bonds, the allure of passion and physical connection with a partner proves to be more enticing in that moment. She longs for the thrill of love rather than the mundane comfort of family meals.

This struggle highlights her yearning for freedom and youthful experiences, contrasting the constraints of domesticity with the exhilaration of a budding romance. The vivid imagery of starlight and shared intimacy underscores her craving for life beyond familial expectations, showcasing a universal theme of choosing personal desires over obligations.

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