One of the best examples of the late work of the outstanding British writer, a recognized master of subtle psychological insight. In the novel “Henry and Caton,” we learn the story of two wayward sons: art historian Henry Marshalson, returning to England from a long American “exile,” inherited the family estate after his brother’s death—his famous racing-driver brother; and his old friend, the pastor Caton Forbes, tries to manage two passions that are reprehensible in different ways—one for God, whose existence he is not sure of, and one for a juvenile offender, for whom perhaps not everything is lost yet. Can new love become a saving force in their closed world—or will it again turn into obsession, blackmail, and violence?