I didn't fully understand it. Personally, Sarah went to the villa. It's just that the plot in the villa corresponds to reality and fiction. Sarah should have a vague feeling for the publisher. In the process of interacting with the publishing house daughter, she released her emotions, but at the same time she also found that she could not pin her emotions on the merciful publisher. Regarding Julie's plot, Julie's mother's novel, and whether the murder actually happened, Julie's interaction with Sarah can be seen as the author's avatar's participation in the storyline in the novel. How much the storyline is connected to the truth is not the point. The point is that Sarah’s own changes in the publisher’s emotions, she released her emotions, and gained insight into the nature of the publisher’s view of women as playthings. She put this emotion into her constant search for the love of a man, and finally disappointed. Julie, who lifted a rock to hit the man, was always denied by the publisher, Julie’s mother, and the novel she wrote. In the novel, she committed Julie against Julie. The cover of murder. In the end, the novel is completed. Faced with this novel that alludes to one's own life, the publisher naturally has a negative attitude. Sarah had expected that she would no longer rely on the publishing house, but would publish the novel separately. As for the days that took place in the villa, which are real and which are Sara’s artistic processing, it is no longer important.
View more about Swimming Pool reviews