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Le Divorce
 
 

Le Divorce [Paperback]

Diane Johnson
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (111 customer reviews)
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Diane Johnson updates the transatlantic novel so gorgeously rendered by Henry James, Edith Wharton, William Dean Howells, and Nathaniel Hawthorne; evokes the spirit of such expatriates sojourning in Paris as Ernest Hemingway and F. Scott Fitzgerald; and mines the pathos of modern fiction in creating this wonderful and important novel. Isabel Walker, eerily reminiscent of James's Isabel Archer, is a young film-school dropout who travels to Paris to aid her stepsister, who is going through a divorce. Isabel's California cool, American freedoms, and feminist slants comingle, successfully and fractiously, with the customs, biases, and complex sexuality of modern Europe. The result modulates between introspection and hilarity, and a quick, Hollywood-inspired sweep of violent action in the end doesn't undermine the author's mastery of Old World vs. New--in fact, it provides an ironic scrim. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Publishers Weekly

It's no accident that the epigraph for this delightfully urbane social tragicomedy is taken from Henry James. Narrator Isabel Walker is a latter-day Isabel Archer, a charming, intelligent but naive American in Paris, who thinks herself sophisticated and analytical until her eyes are opened during the ironic, erotic and shocking events in the course of which she comes of age. Restless and unfocused, a drop-out from film school at Berkeley, Isabel is sent to Paris to help her pregnant step-sister, Roxy, through a difficult time: Roxy's husband, Charles-Henri Persand, has left her and their toddler daughter to run off with another woman. Isabel accepts a motley range of jobs in the American expatriate community?running errands, helping a famous writer with her files, serving at parties, etc.?and becomes aware of the jealousy and backbiting among the insular set. At first totally at sea because of the language barrier, she also gradually becomes aware that a chasm of misunderstandings and basic attitudinal differences lies beneath the cordial facade of Franco-American relationships. Meanwhile, an heirloom painting that Roxy brought to Paris is suddenly discovered to be an immensely valuable La Tour; under French law, it will be considered part of the divorce settlement. The tangled provenance of this painting creates tensions among the Walker family's half-siblings. The wealthy and powerful Persand family are also beset by a series of emotional involvements, including Isabel's own clandestine relationship with Charles-Henri's elderly uncle, a charming roue and political eminence grise. By the time the various strands of the plot culminate in surreal scenes at EuroDisney and the poubelles (refuse bins) of Roxy's apartment building, Isabel has become wiser about herself and the world, though she realizes that her point of view will always be colored by her Californian mindset. Johnson's (Persian Nights) control of her material is impeccable. The world of American expatriates is fertile territory for her ironic wit, which is both subtle and sharp. Everything here delights the reader: the sinuous plot with its rising suspense; the charged insights into family dynamics; the reflections on morality as perceived on both sides of the Atlantic; the witty asides on food, politics and sibling rivalry; the dialogue, which reflects both American and French speech patterns and social conventions; and the views of Paris itself, seen through the eyes of an ingenue who grows in sophistication as she begins to understand the reality that permeates this city of romance.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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Customer Reviews

111 Reviews
5 star:
 (10)
4 star:
 (32)
3 star:
 (22)
2 star:
 (23)
1 star:
 (24)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (111 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Absolument pathetique, Jun 6 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Le Divorce (Paperback)
That means absolutely pathetic, for all you amèrloques. And if you knew enough French to know that already, then you know more about the French than Diane Johnson.

You honestly have to wonder if this woman has even been to France or if she just listens to what the American media has to say about them.

She plays into and capitalizes on stereotypes that don't exist. Her portrayal of the French is sickening. She makes them look like they hate all Americans (which isn't true). Her characters carry purses everywhere (only Americans carry purses). She portrays French women as bitc#es (which I've met more American versions of, to be quite frank). Also, she's simply wrong on some points of the French legal system. Towards the close of the book, she says the Napoleonic code is guilty until proven innocent. I just took a French law course, taught by an actual French lawyer, and that's NOT true. In the French system, defendants do not enter a plea at all because everyone is considered not guilty (pas coupable) until proven otherwise.

For what it's worth, she also makes incorrect allusions to Henry James and the Bible.

To be absolument franche, I was more than disappointed with this book.

I'm an American girl, born and bread in rural Kentucky, but I lived in France in college and currently work as an interpreter. I'm pursuing my masters in French. If it's French at all, I love it. I don't know what country Ms Johnson thinks her book is set in, but I'm telling you, it's NOT France.

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5.0 out of 5 stars Not a lipstick fluff novel, May 6 2004
By 
This review is from: Le Divorce (Paperback)
I agree with the reviewer from Amherst - this is satire. The complaints of other readers largely stem, not from the writing, but from the way the book was marketed. It was made to look like a fun, rollicking exploration of two cultures - very fast-food and mindless, like the new lines of fluff books aimed at 20-30-somethings. Two of the quotes on the back cover appear to have been written for an entirely different novel ("Sparkly novel...Alluring...Delightful...Charming tale"). Le Divorce is actually an intelligent, funny book with a distinct edge. It is not a terribly good-hearted book. It focuses on a group of American, French and English characters, none of whom are entirely likeable. This includes the narrator, a pragmatic young woman who views the people around her in a clear-eyed, unromantic way and is surprised to find herself falling in love with an elder uncle of her brother-in-law's family - or is it love? "Even as a little girl, I lacked that endearing quality of female credulousness." Her entirely conscious examination of the romantic cliches she has fallen into, and her honesty about her own and others' less admirable motives throughout the book, make this an interesting story - but not one a reader should go to for a soothing, brainless read.
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2.0 out of 5 stars Is this an American woman ?, April 15 2004
By A Customer
This review is from: Le Divorce (Paperback)
I cannot understand if this is an insulting book to describe American women or the French peoples. I don't know how desperate is Isabel, in her twenties, young , beautiful to get into being a mistress to an elderly that charms her, buys her something expensive, convert the girl into Tuesday's mistress, have fun, and on the top of that insults frequently with those '" You American this, you American that.... "in her nose and that girl is nodding in agreement and planning to buy him something so expensive and making plans to move to other country to stay close to him. He is trying to end the relationship with excuses and go on with his life. Can she see what is going on ? Is she dumb, has no dignity or is simply a generous young woman? And the old fox Edgar got her eating in his hand, sleeping with him and all.
What peoples are going to consider the American women ? Desperates !!!!
Her sister is another dumb woman who wants to kill herself because of her good for nothing husband and cannot be daring to take that painting, and daughter back to America. This would serve well that hypocrite French family-in-law, all smiles on the front but planning to knife her at the back. About those French lawyers, so low. Remember, about law problems, first thing is to return to your own country, and attack from your territory. Blood is thicker than law. Remember that always!
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