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Le Divorce (William Abrahams Book)
In Le Divorce, Diane Johnson delightfully recounts the adventures of two sisters from California who make a modern pilgrimage to the City of Light. Pregnant and abandoned by her French husband, Roxeanne Walker de Persand turns to her younger sister, Isabel, for support, while the powerful Persand family exerts subtle but firm control over her decision whether or not to divorce. Complicating matters is the disposition of a family heirloom, a painting in Roxy's possession that is suddenly discovered to be worth millions. In the midst of a variety of schemes, the stakes are suddenly raised by a crime of passion, disrupting everyone's motives and plans. Not since Edith Wharton penned her brilliant portraits of Americans abroad has an American novelist so perfectly captured the possibilities and perils of succumbing to the allure of Paris. *Le Divorce was a hardcover bestseller appearing on the Boston Globe, The San Francisco Chronicle, Los Angeles Times, Chicago Tribune, Publishers Weekly, and Newsday bestseller lists. * Le Divorce received outstanding reviews. * The hardcover is in its 8th printing with over 50,000 copies in print. *Plume is embarking on a major Diane Johnson backlist reissue program with one out-of-print title to appear each month between February and June 1994. more
- From: Amazon
- Posted: Sep-18-2008
So misleading...
This novel was such a huge huge disappointment to me - it will be the last time I rely on the back cover of a book to give me any indication as to its contents - sexy, cool, irrepressible Isabel?? She was one of the the most boring, most self-obsessed characters I have come across in fiction. I...
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- Posted: Nov-04-2006
Better than the movie
This beautiful book is so much better than the movie. The ending is completely different. Like Diane Johnson's other novels, she expects her reader to be educated in literature, not just Voltaire and other French writers, but American ones, too, and even ancient Greek philosophers. If you...
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- Posted: Jun-12-2006
SO DISAPPOINTING
I rarely read fiction and only read this book because it took place in Paris and because I found it at a yard sale, with Le Marriage, for 25 cents. That's what it was worth and it confirmed to me that much of what fiction writers write is boring. My benchmark for a great fiction read taking place...
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- Posted: Feb-11-2006
Meh
A short review because I basically agree with the other reviewers' opinions. My trouble is that I actually really like Diane Johnson's writing: I like her use of language and I like her funny observations that are so very human and familiar. What I cannot stand, and in this book particularly, is...
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- Posted: Aug-26-2005
Where's the Sequel?
This book annoyed me like no book has ever done before. I liked it at first, because it has lots of fabulous insights, description, and dialog. Here are some examples:"Mrs. Pace was a mighty person. She said what people were. And if she said someone was a fool, that didn't necessarily mean she...
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- Posted: Jul-18-2005
At times great, at others only so-so
While the idea of running off to Paris appealed to me, the story had its moments where the characters turned me off. I never really bought into Isabelle's relationship with a man so much older than her. There never seemed to be a genuine attraction, and I almost disliked her for her...
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- Posted: Feb-05-2005
Pisses me off!
This is a decently-written, interesting observation of social THOUGHT. I'm annoyed, however, that Isabel is such a twit- I know she's young, but she misses really obvious statements- sometimes she understands French & at others she doesn't, conveniently for the novelist. I suppose I am angry...
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- Posted: Jan-13-2005
uneven quality but a pleasant read
"Le Divorce" is the coming-of-age tale of a young American in Paris. Isabel, the narrator, has left her California life to live with her sister, Roxeanne, who is pregnant and whose husband has just left her for another woman. Isabel is introduced to her sister's in-laws, a varied and...
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- Posted: Jan-11-2005
Finally The Truth About Prison
This book should have been writen looooong time ago. It tells the true side of the harsh world behind the bars and walls so many of us knoiw very little about. Forget all the Hollywood drama Mr Ehrman tells it like it is.
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- Posted: Jan-10-2005
Spoiled, Vain and Self-absorbed Characters
The book, Le Divorce, is well-written but this does not mean that I have even remotely enjoyed reading it. The spoiled, vain and self-absorbed characters are a complete distraction. I have found this book to be overly impressed with itself. My vote, 2 Stars - take a pass on this one.SAM
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