CreateSpace 2014 |
The story opens in St Petersburg
in 1864 as seventeen year old Anna, the daughter of a prosperous Russian
furrier, is swept off her feet in a whirlwind romance with the attractive and
elegant Frenchman, Emile Daubigny. In joyful anticipation, Anna leaves her
family in St Petersburg and enters married life in the glorious city of Paris,
where she expects to have a comfortable and affluent lifestyle amongst the
great and the good of this enchanting city. However, Anna’s circumstances
change dramatically when her husband Emile mysteriously disappears leaving her
both homeless and penniless. As a woman alone, in a man’s world, Anna soon
discovers that she has limited choices, and as the Franco-Prussian war looms,
Anna must do whatever she can to survive. In a skilful blending of fact and
fiction, Anna’s story is told against the back drop of a city in turmoil, the Franco-Prussian
war encroaches, not just on the way in which the city of Paris went about its
daily business, but it also demonstrated the fact that lone women would be always
be considered to be at the mercy of powerful men.
The narrative is nicely written
with a fine eye for detail and the author’s obvious love of history and skill at
historical research shines throughout the story, so much so, the era really
does come alive. The majestic splendour of sharing company with the Emperor Napoleon
III during a rendition of La Belle Hélène at the opera house, and of chance
encounters with Alexandre Dumas during intimate suppers at the Moulin Rouge, sit
quite comfortably against the more colourful and lively description of washday
in one of the city’s more salubrious washing sheds. The juxtaposition of vast
wealth is counteracted against the descriptions of lives which are affected
just as deeply by poverty and squalor. The rich array of characters who flit
into and out of the story add an undeniable charm, and yet what shines throughout
is Anna’s strength of character and the way in which she was able to keep her
dreams alive.
Overall, the story adds a lovely
touch of authenticity to a thoughtful and sensitive portrayal of a tumultuous
period in French history. The ending of the book lends itself quite nicely to a
continuation of the story, as there are still avenues to explore and loose ends
which need some clarification. However, I am sure that this feisty heroine will
find much to occupy her in her city of dreams.
*~*~*
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