In New York City, the fourth season seems more interesting with the emerging novelist Noah. Noah does a romantic relationship with a 20-year-old wife with four children called Alison, who works as a waitress. This is an emotional relationship outside formal marriage, and neither seems interested in the idea of customs.
And besides the cast of Dominic West and Maura Tierney... "The Affair" has that marvelous conceit of looking at a situation from two sides, which may be more necessary now than ever.
Growth happens, here and there, but there's always another emotional crisis just around the corner... Which is exactly what draws us back to "The Affair."
The new episodes capably reignite the show's original allure, discarding some unnecessary bloat and focusing once more on "The Affair's" basic premise, which is that no two people will ever view the same occurrences and facts the same way.