This book is rich in generalized but witty observations about French culture from an American perspective. I picked up the book because I had heard could learn from Johnson's treatment of the French, and I did enjoy it in some respects. Ultimately, though, the narrative is superficial, as are all the characters, and while I had plenty of laughs while reading this, I experienced little intellectual stimulation or fulfillment and outright frustration and disgust at the over-the-top final conclusion.
The entire premise of the book seems to be a binary analysis - a compare/contrast exercise (in America we do this. In France they do that). Unfortunately, there were several problems along the way. One is that to Isabel Walker, the narrator, "America" seems to equate to "Santa Barbara," which is where she's from. As I'm from New York, many of the American observations didn't "ring true" to me. Another is that while the novel has a far reach in terms of subject matter and content, it is all skimmed along the surface, nothing is penetrated in any kind of depth. The story is fast-moving, which pulls you along, but when you put the book down, you realize how little has actually happened. Isabel's insecurities, desires, and ability to exasperate and frustrate her family are all referenced but not set up, foreshadowed, realized or even fully explored. There are completely unnecessary characters who are introduced and not followed up on, until they're needed and dropped back on the page for unnecessary plot twists. The recurring discussion of the Bosnian War, intended to illustrate Isabel's new "life of the mind" while living in France, is superficial and chatty.
There are unfinished and unrealized spots throughout the book: for instance, why does Gennie, the 3-year-old, never act out or assert herself in the entire 300 pages, despite the stress and distress of her mother and aunt? She simply goes to the creche and comes back and every once in a while holds someone's hand. This book very nearly but not completely evokes the world of its imagining.While some aspects of Isabel's affair with an older man are sensitively handled, the family drama of both her family and her sister's in-laws successfully portrayed as reducing each character to a contextualized puppet, and the literary tradition of American women corrupted by European men effectively utilized, the over-the-top plot twists at the end ruined any previous enjoyment of the book I had experienced. Here are the worst aspects of the book exponentially increased.
This could have been a sensitive book about a family experiencing a divorce and the complications international marriages bring to divorce proceedings, but instead, in the last scenes, it turns into a pseudo-thriller with unbelievable events written rather poorly. I felt shoddy craftmanship coming into play here - while the book was lurching along, making up for in some spots what it lacked in others, by the end, the skill to finish strong seemed to be lacking, and cheap tricks were used instead.