ABUNDANCE by SENA JETER NASLUND
di elisarolle
"Like
everyone, I am born naked."
With this opening line of Naslund's compelling new novel, a very human Marie
Antoinette invites readers to live her story as she herself experiences it. From
the lush gardens of Versailles to the lights and gaiety of Paris, the verdant
countryside of France, and finally the stark and terrifying isolation of a
prison cell, the young queen's life is joyful, poignant, and harrowing by turns.
As her world of unprecedented royal splendor crumbles, the charming Marie
Antoinette matures into a heroine of inspiring stature, one whose nobility
arises not from the circumstance of her birth but from her courageous spirit.
Marie Antoinette was a child of fourteen when her mother, the Empress of
Austria, arranged for her to leave her family and her country to become the wife
of the fifteen-year-old Dauphin, the future King of France. Coming of age in the
most public of arenas, the young queen embraces her new family and the French
people, and she is embraced in return. Eager to be a good wife and strong queen,
she shows her new husband nothing but love and encouragement, though he
repeatedly fails to consummate their marriage and in doing so, fails to give her
the thing she—and the people of France—desire most: a child and an heir to the
throne.
Deeply disappointed and isolated in her own intimate circle apart from the
social life of the court, the queen allows herself to remain ignorant of the
country's growing economic and political crises. She entrusts her soul to her
women friends, her music teacher, her hairdresser, the ambassador from Austria,
and a certain Swedish count so handsome that admirers label him "the Picture."
When her innocent and well-chaperoned pilgrimage to watch the sun rise is
viciously misrepresented in satiric pamphlets as a drunken orgy, the people
begin to turn against her. Poor harvests, bitter winters, war debts, and poverty
precipitate rebellion and revenge as the royal family and many nobles are caught
up in a murderous time known as "the Terror."
With penetrant insight into new historical scholarship and with wondrous
narrative skill, Naslund offers an intimate, fresh, and dramatic re-creation of
this compelling woman that goes beyond popular myth. Abundance reveals a
compassionate and spontaneous Marie Antoinette who rejected the formality and
rigid protocol of the court; an enchanting and tenderhearted outsider who was
loved by her adopted homeland and people until she became the target of
revolutionary cruelty and violence; a dethroned queen whose depth of character
sustained her in even the worst of times.
Once again, Sena Jeter Naslund has shed new light on an important moment of
historical change and made that time as real to us as the one we are living now.
Exquisitely detailed, beautifully written, heartbreaking and powerful, Abundance
is a novel that is impossible to put down.