Susanna is a modiste in Vienna in 1911. She lives on Madensky Square with her revolutionary model/seamstress. In her forties (I think) she is beautiful, the mistress of a senior politician/soldier, and the mother of a child she gave away at birth.
This is an odd book. It is beautifully written and Madensky Square itself is one of my favourite characters in the story, so evocatively drawn, I wanted to live there myself. I share Susanna’s love of fabric, or creating, of seeing a creation worn by just the right person, though I haven’t made it my life’s work. I love her eye for detail, both for clothes and for people. And I really enjoyed some of the people in the book, who were drawn with a similar fine eye.
This is one of those stories that meanders in a nice, soothing way. You know that all the ends are going to be tied up. You trust the author won’t make it too sugary, though there are sugary elements. But underneath the pretty descriptions, the quaint, eccentric characters, there’s a very dark element to this story. This is Vienna, a city about to be ripped apart by WWI. A number of the main characters are bound to be killed or widowed. And later, after the war, when the National Socialists come to the fore, a number of the main characters will find the city they love no longer loves them.
So history casts a cloud, but it’s not the only one. The women in this story share one core value – beauty – and that sat quite uncomfortably with me. They live through beauty, and their beauty – faces, clothes, houses, even inner strength – is all for the men in their lives, or in order to bring men into their lives. They existed through men. Only one man exists for a woman, and that was the little child prodigy pianist, the one character in the book actually, which I felt was two-dimensional.
I finished this book not knowing how I felt about it. I enjoyed reading it. I didn’t have to skip to the end, I relished the writing. And yet at the end, I felt a bit sad and a bit empty. Maybe there are better books by Ibbotson – this was my first. I will take a look and try another.