But it’s also an insistent and deft look at passion and art, a book about growing up and facing your limits and getting on with life. On one level, it tells a straightforward story, of a young woman in the 1970s who fought her way into the professional ballet world, helped her Russian dancer/sort-of boyfriend defect, and then left the ballet, married a “civilian” and raised a son who turned out to be ballet-obsessed. So this sophisticated, intelligent novel was an astonishing discovery. A confession: I may have been the only reviewer who was not blown away by Maggie Shipstead’s best-selling debut, Seating Arrangements. An Amazon Best Book of the Month, April 2014: “Etonnez-moi (astonish me)!”–was the great ballet impresario Serge Diaghilev’s command to his collaborators and dancers, and it’s just what this insistent, subtle novel did to me.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |