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Il ballo delle pazze

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Parigi, 1885. A fine Ottocento l’ospedale della Salpêtrière è né più né meno che un manicomio femminile. Certo, le internate non sono più tenute in catene come nel Seicento, vengono chiamate “isteriche” e curate con l’ipnosi dall’illustre dottor Charcot, ma sono comunque strettamente sorvegliate, tagliate fuori da ogni contatto con l’esterno e sottoposte a esperimenti azzardati e impietosi. Alla Salpêtrière si entra e non si esce. In realtà buona parte delle cosiddette alienate sono donne scomode, rifiutate, che le loro famiglie abbandonano in ospedale per sbarazzarsene.

Alla Salpêtrière si Louise, adolescente figlia del popolo, finita lì in seguito a terribili vicissitudini che hanno sconvolto la sua giovane vita; Eugénie, signorina di buona famiglia allontanata dai suoi perché troppo bizzarra e anticonformista; Geneviève, la capoinfermiera rigida e severa, convinta della superiorità della scienza su tutto. E poi c’è Thérèse, la decana delle internate, molto più saggia che pazza, una specie di madre per le più giovani. Benché molto diverse, tutte hanno chiara una la loro sorte è stata decisa dagli uomini, dallo strapotere che gli uomini hanno sulle donne. A sconvolgere e trasformare la loro vita sarà il “ballo delle pazze”, ossia il ballo mascherato che si tiene ogni anno alla Salpêtrière e a cui viene invitata la crème di Parigi. In quell’occasione, mascherarsi farà cadere le maschere.

Una storia avventurosa e appassionata, un inno alla libertà delle donne in un mondo che ancora nell’Ottocento era dominato dagli uomini.

181 pages, Kindle Edition

First published August 21, 2019

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About the author

Victoria Mas

12 books288 followers
Victoria Mas was born in 1987. The Mad Women's Ball, her first novel, has won several prizes in France (including the Prix Stanislas and Prix Renaudot des Lycéens) and been hailed as the bestselling debut of the season. She has worked in film in the United States, where she lived for eight years. She graduated from the Sorbonne University in Contemporary Literature.

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Profile Image for s.penkevich [hiatus-will return-miss you all].
1,573 reviews14.9k followers
March 10, 2025
Truth be told, whether free or incarcerated, women were not safe anywhere. Since the dawn of time, they had been the victims of decisions that were taken without their consent.

Long through history we find the tragedy of women facing disbelief and dismissal over medical complaints while also being accused of hysteria as further reason for dismissal. Hysteria was one of the most commonly diagnosed conditions of the 18th and 19th centuries, though it originates in Ancient Greece where Hippocrates said a woman's uterus could travel around the body wreaking havoc on mental and physical health. Hence the term hysteria coming from the Greek word for uterus: hystera. French author Victoria Mas’s novel The Man Women’s Ball captures a specific period in the history of hysteria diagnosis as Mas crafts a riveting novel based on the true details of Salpêtrière hospital and the work done there in the 19th century by Jean-Martin Charcot. Building towards a Lenten Ball where patients would mix with the aristocracy as one of the many rather exploitive performances these women were subjected to, Mas’ gripping historical novel—translated by Frank Wynne—examines the way hysteria was often an excuse to lock women away for any reason as a larger exploration of the repression against women and the sisterhoods that form in defiance of patriarchy.
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Depiction of Charcot’s hysteria performances to eager doctors

My book is a fiction,’ Mas explained in a conversation with The Independent,’but it is based on events that really happened in 19th-century Paris. Terrible things that really happened to many women in the Salpêtrière 200 years ago, when the very thin line between medical treatment and voyeurism was blurred.’ The novel draws from a great depths of research and depicts real figures from history, such as Charcot himself, though he is more a looming figure casting his shadow over the story, and Louise Augustine Gleizes who was Charcot’s most public and photographed patient and who’s story forms the framework of the novel. Along with Louise we have Geneviève, a nurse at the hospital who finds her convictions tested, and Eugénie, the daughter of an aristocrat who finds herself discarded into Salpêtrière on claims of hysteria. Though is it more her claims of visitations from beyond the grave or her outspoken nature (and her “scandelous” behavoir of openly reading authors like Victor Hugo) that leads to her internment, because, as we learn, hysteria seems less a diagnosis than a rationalization for sending a woman away.
The Salpêtriére is a dumping ground for women who disturb the peace. An asylum for those whose sensitivities do not tally what is expected of them. A prison for women guilty of possessing an opinion.

Hysteria is the common charge as a blanket enforcement of misogyny, ‘the system that operates within a patriarchal social order to police and enforce women’s subordination and to uphold male dominance,’ as Kate Manne puts it. Charges of being over-emotional or simply having an outspoken opinion were enough to be labeled hysterical and be shut away, and men eagerly took the opportunity to rid themselves of wives and daughters in this way. One might be reminded of author Anna Kavan, who’s husband had his mistress move into their home and moved his wife into the basement. When they found her a nuisance, they had her committed to an asylum for being hysterical (further sending a message that a women's understandable frustration is not deemed valid), which she fictionalized in her book Asylum Piece. And this still happens today, look at the conservatorship over Britney Spears after she exhibited mental health issues from being pushed to the brink. It all became an excuse to remove her agency over herself and her finances. ‘As long as men have pricks, all the evil in this world will go on existing,’ Mas writes, and as long as women show agency in a patriarchal society, men will find ways to self-justify abusing them. Which is why stories like this are important in understanding how to detangle the web of misogyny.

Somewhere between an asylum and a prison, the Salpetriere took in those that Paris did not know how to cope with: invalids and women.

Known as the ‘father of modern neurology,’—though nicknamed ‘Napoleon of neuroses’—Charcot opened a clinic in Salpêtrière in 1882 where he examined women with cases of hysteria. His work with patients included hypnosis and cauterisation of the cervix and compression of the ovaries, which was done with a vice. He would hold public performances of his hypnosis, which were a massive spectacle at the time despite the obvious ethical issues here. This sort of exploitation and experimental treatment make up a lot of the novel, but so does the ways in which the women find to support one another and challenge their ways of thinking. ‘What is important is not to have beliefs, but to be able to doubt, to question anything, everything, even oneself,’ Mas writes, and much of the book involves realizing one must look beneath the surface of what is socially accepted and enforced in a patriarchal society in order to break free from its shackles.
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One of the patients as photographed by Dr. Charcot.

This is a rather short novel, with events happening at a pretty rhythmical click and while I tend to prefer more succinct books, this one almost feels a bit constrained. The focus remains on the major themes of oppression and resistance, but as a historical novel it seems to dip in and out of historical set pieces instead of really immersing you in them. Which is a minor complaint as the story kept me riveted as the tension builds towards the titular ball. The Man Women’s Ball is a fascinating read that explores a frustrating period of history yet casts its message into the present to remind us these lessons are still just as important as ever.

3.5/5

They are no longer wives or mothers or adolescent girls, they are no longer women to be considered or contemplated, they will never be women who are desired or loved; they are patients. Lunatics. Nobodies.
Profile Image for Whitney Erwin.
300 reviews94 followers
June 23, 2022
This book was an enjoyable, interesting read but it also broke my heart. It is powerful and eye- opening. This is one of those books that will stay with me. It broke my heart for all the women who were unfairly treated during this time and institutionalized. It is a short, quick book and I feel like it could have been even better if it was longer and more in depth on some of the characters pasts. I also would have loved more on Eugenie's new life after her escape. I would recommend this book for anyone who loves historical fiction. Overall, a very good read!

Thank you Net Galley and Abrams, The Overlook Press for an ARC of this book in exchange for my honest review.

This book will be published September 14, 2021.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Liz.
2,825 reviews3,732 followers
August 5, 2021
“Illness dehumanizes.” And certainly madness in the 1880’s is the ultimate in dehumanizing diseases. The story takes place in the Salpetriere asylum in 1885 Paris. The patients are all ages, all levels of society. Not all the women are truly sick, some have just been deemed inconvenient or problematic by their families and placed here. “The Salpetriere is a dumping ground for women who have disturbed the peace. An asylum for those whose sensitivities do not tally with what is expected of them. A prison for women guilty of possessing an opinion.”
Dr. Charcot is the famous neurologist who uses hypnosis to induce “fits” in his patients so that they can be observed and studied. He and the other doctors treat the patients like specimens to be studied. Genevieve is his senior nurse, a woman who believes in the good doctor, but he doesn’t care a whit for her opinion. And Eugenie, whose father has her admitted after she tells her grandmother about her ability to see the dead.
Based on a true event, once a year there is the Mad Women’s Ball, a chance for le beau monde of Paris to come witness the women, to watch the spectacle of them dressed in their ball gowns. To the invitees, it’s entertainment; to the patients, it’s a diversion from the boredom of their everyday existence.
The book shines when it describes the lives of women, their lack of choices, the way men control them in all matters. There’s also a great sense of time and place, both within and outside of the asylum walls.
I can’t say that the magic realism of a woman that sees and hears the dead really worked for me. I would have preferred a story based on Eugenie’s other qualities, her independence, her intelligence, her unwillingness to conform, being the reason she was locked up. But the device obviously advances the plot.
This is a dark reminder of what it meant to be female in previous centuries. This is well done historical fiction which would make a strong book club selection.
My thanks to NetGalley and The Overlook Press for an advance copy of this book.
Profile Image for Debbie W..
944 reviews836 followers
November 17, 2022
Why I chose to read this book:
1. after reading GR friend, Carol's review, and seeing the gorgeous cover design, I was immediately drawn in to add this book to my WTR list; and,
2. September 2022 is my self-declared "Historical Fiction Month".

Praises:
1. "Since the dawn of time, they (women) had been the victims of decisions that were taken without their consent" is really the essence of this story!
2. it's so disconcerting that, over the years, so many physical and intellectual constraints were imposed upon women that many were committed to lunatic asylums such as Paris's Salpetriere Hospital, which is where this story is set in 1885. Author Victoria Mas successfully captures this setting, not only in this hospital, but on the Parisian streets and its homes as well;
3. I felt like I could get into the minds and hearts of several believable characters, whether empathetic to their terrifying situations, or at least, understanding of their thought processes. The dialogue was suitably authentic;
4. in reality, this hospital's Lenten Ball (aka The Mad Women's Ball) was an event anticipated by the upper-class society, not only as a "break" for a few hours from the fasting and prayer required during Lent, but hopefully to witness a hysterical fit or two. The female patients, on the other hand, also eagerly prepared personal costumes for this Ball, but with the hopes of being freed by a sympathetic guest. Although the Ball was the culminating event in this story, the skillful building of descriptive characters and settings two weeks prior to the Ball was necessary; and,
5. at times, it was quite suspenseful! Several possible scenarios came to mind, but which one will come to fruition, and how?

Niggles:
1. although satisfying, the ending was somewhat predictable for some of the characters; and,
2. I wish the author included an "Afterword" with historical references to the Salpetriere Hospital.

Overall Thoughts:
I enjoyed this fast-paced, well-researched story about the history of an institution that I was unfamiliar with!

Recommendation?
Historical fiction fans would most likely enjoy and learn from this underrepresented piece of Parisian history.
Profile Image for Charlotte May.
859 reviews1,306 followers
July 3, 2022
“Somewhere between an asylum and a prison, the Salpetriere took in those that Paris did not know how to cope with: invalids and women.”

Thoroughly enjoyed this short novel that covers some big topics about mental health and asylums in history.

Eugenie has been signed over to the institution by her family after telling her grandmother she can see and communicate with spirits.
Meanwhile Genevieve’s job is her whole life, since her sister died she never lets herself feel anything. Particularly not for her patients. She has cut herself off, and is a great fan of Doctor Charat’s new theories and experiments.

But when the two women meet, they both change one another. Eugenie is desperate to find people who will accept her and her abilities. Genevieve is starting to wonder if the Doctor everyone has idolised is actually as great as everyone thinks.

The actual ball is only a very small portion of this story, so bear that in mind if you were expecting differently.

But overall, I thoroughly enjoyed this and would recommend.

“The Salpetriere is a dumping ground for women who disturb the peace. A prison for women guilty of possessing an opinion.”

************************
Library copy available for pick up

I’ve been waiting for this one ages! So exciting 😁
Profile Image for Libby.
622 reviews153 followers
November 15, 2021
In her debut novel, Victoria Mas explores the vulnerabilities of women in the late 19th century but she also explores their strengths and their commonalities. The book opens on the scene of a sixteen-year-old young woman, Louise, going to a lecture held by Dr. Jean-Martin Charcot at the Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris. The head nurse, Geneviève, accompanies Louise to the theater and reflects with pride on Dr. Charcot’s accomplishments and the entourage of important people he attracts to his presentations, politicians, journalists, and others, exclusively male. They are spectators, but Louise is the spectacle. Dr. Charcot hypnotizes her and induces an attack of hysteria, so that it may be studied. What Mas details in the narrative seems more like a grand mal seizure to me, as Louise spasms in what looks like demonic possession.

Geneviève is known as “the Old Lady” by the women patients who live at Salpêtrière. She is the head nurse, stern, unyielding, but somehow conveys stability to the patients. Geneviève is committed to logic, to science, and so seemingly to the world of men as superior, for that is what culture and medicine have decreed in this time and space. Her sister Blandine died at age sixteen. Blandine had been devout, but her piety had not kept her from dying. Geneviève feels guilty that she is still alive and she is angry at God. Many nights she writes letters to her beloved sister, telling Blandine about her thoughts and events in her life.

Eugénie is from a middle-class background, intelligent and astutely observant. Eugénie realizes that her only value to her father is her marriageability. She asks to attend salons with her older brother, Théophile, which her father disallows. Secretly, she attends. When she engages in what she calls debate with her father, he calls her insolent. If Eugénie should tell anyone her greatest secret, she knows they would carry her off to Salpêtrière.

In this narrative, Eugénie becomes a literal and figurative bridge between a spirit world and a world of flesh and blood. She has a lively intelligence and curiosity, a penchant for learning everything she can; yet another unseen world that she has not asked for and did not seek impinges upon her consciousness. She is science-minded like Geneviève but due to her experiences she is aware of another realm, another way of being that is considered neither logical nor rational. Is she mad? Between madness and science, is there another completely lucid space? A space that is hidden from our everyday gaze, that is impossible to see with the blinders of rational existence. What do madness and science have to say about it? This book offers an exploration into these thoughts. I saw Eugénie as a woman of Geniviève’s intelligence with Blandine’s otherworldliness, although certainly not her piety. She is not “convinced by Christian doctrine; she does not deny the possibility of a God, but has preferred to believe in herself rather than in some abstract entity. She has found it difficult to believe in a heaven and a hell that are eternal - life already seems like a form of punishment, and the idea that this punishment would continue after death seems absurd and unjust.”

Dr. Charcot is a famous neurologist known as a pioneer in the fields of neurology and psychology. In this narrative, he is chauvinistic and egotistical, building up his reputation at the expense of his patient’s well-being. Eugénie’s father is narrow-minded and doesn’t consider his daughter’s personhood, her right to happiness and fulfillment in life. Théophile is the sole sympathetic male in this narrative.

A highly rewarding reading experience.
Profile Image for Sujoya - theoverbookedbibliophile.
789 reviews3,512 followers
March 11, 2023
“The Salpêtrière is a dumping ground for women who disturb the peace. An asylum for those whose sensitivities do not tally with what is expected of them. A prison for women guilty of possessing an opinion.”

In 1885 Paris, nineteen-year-old Eugenie Clery, a strong-willed young woman, is committed to the Salpêtrière Hospital for the mentally -ill by her father after her grandmother betrays her secret about her spiritualistic leanings that she had shared in confidence . Here she meets Genevieve the senior nurse of the facility – a practical woman who believes in science, doesn't believe in God (after a personal tragedy) and has faith in renowned neurologist Dr. Charcot’s methods for treatment of those suffering from mental illness. Dr. Charcot’s methods include hypnosis and every week he holds a practical demonstration of his methods for an audience of male doctors and interns. Louise, one of the patients Eugenie meets (the origins of her illness are discussed later on in the narrative) is the current case study. Louise is also romantically involved with one of the younger doctors who has promised to marry her. Eugenie knows that Genevieve is the only person who can help her but to do so would mean convincing her that she is not mentally ill. To do so she must use her gifts to make a connection with someone from Genevieve’s past – her younger sister Blandine whose death she still mourns- and she must do this before The Madwomen’s Ball. The Lenten Ball, The Madwomen’s Ball is an annual event wherein select members of the Parisian bourgeoisie are invited to interact with the patients of the asylum – a bright event that the women of Salpêtrière look forward for the festivities and the potential opportunity to meet someone sympathetic to their plight and an opportunity for the invitees to openly observe these women and satisfy their curiosity.

“Madwomen fascinate and horrify.”

The Mad Women’s Ball by Victoria Mas (translated by Frank Wynne) is an atmospheric, insightful and thought-provoking story that paints a heartbreaking picture of the plight of women banished from their homes and families and society in general on the whims of those whom they should have been able to trust. The story not only looks at the stigma associated with mental–illness during that period but also sheds a light on the practice of dubbing those not conforming to societal /patriarchal expectations as mentally ill. Not only were these women denied agency but were treated like experiments by their doctors and theater by those who were "curious” about what went on behind the closed doors of the institution.

“No woman can be certain that her words, her aspirations, her personality will not lead to her
being shut away behind the fearsome walls of the hospital in the thirteenth arrondissement.”


The narrative is shared from the perspectives of Genevieve, Louise, and Eugenie. Given the short length of this novel, there isn’t much much scope for in-depth character development or exploring the relationships between the characters beyond a certain point. On that note, I thought Eugenie’s story was left somewhat incomplete. The Author's Note only provides a glossary for real people from that era who make an appearance/ are referred to in this story. I did feel the need for an Author’s Note on the historical context of this novel and the different themes that have been explored in the novel including the spiritualist movement of that era and some background on the Salpêtrière asylum , which unfortunately was missing.

Overall, while I truly appreciate the premise of this novel, I wasn’t completely satisfied with the execution.

“Unswerving faith in any idea inevitably leads to prejudice. Have I told you how calm I feel since I began to doubt? What is important is not to have beliefs, but to be able to doubt, to question anything, everything, even oneself. To doubt.”
Profile Image for Meike.
Author 1 book4,945 followers
April 7, 2021
Prix Renaudot des lycéens 2019
The topic of Mas' debut novel is interesting and important: Set in 1880s, it tells the story of the women who were declared mad and committed to the Salpêtrière - mostly, these were perfectly healthy females who refused to play the roles society expected them to and women their families (mainly their husbands) wanted to get rid off for various reasons. There, the patients a.k.a. hysterics were kept like in a prison and treated as research objects by doctors like Jean-Martin Charcot who hypnotised women suffering from trauma and nervous conditions, thus inducing seizures, as a public spectacle. Charcot, his colleague Joseph Babinski and other historic personalities figure, and this could have been an excellent examination (haha, sorry) of the treatment of women, if it wasn't oh so clumsily crafted.

Our main characters are Eugénie, a young woman who can see dead people (this is presented as a fact), reads Le Livre des Esprits (one of the first works on spiritism) and is committed by her father, and Geneviève, a nurse who starts to doubt whether what happens at the Salpêtrière is right. While these two join forces, the yearly "Mad Women's Ball" is approaching, an event where "normal" Parisians can enter the ward and dance, so thus another entertainment spectacle that entails staring at suffering women.

So what's the problem here? Unfortunately, Mas spells out everything: Why every character does what, how everything is connected, why what happens is bad. All characters are stock characters, meant to educate the readers - and it's tedious. There is a fantastic story buried in this undercomplex melodrama, and I hope Mélanie Laurent's movie version will bring it out.

Extra points for the translation though, as it was done by the wonderful Frank Wynne!
Profile Image for Diane S ☔.
4,901 reviews14.6k followers
May 14, 2021

May is mental health awareness month, a subject in which I have a vested interest. There is no doubt that the treatment of mental health has improved but there is also little doubt that access to treatment is not available to everyone in need. Also, the stigma of having a mental health issue is very much alive. Still, things have changed albeit slowly. The treatment of women in the past became very much an issue with husbands, fathers, and others could inter women in a mental health institute for disobedience, for being different, for being rebellious and many other issues that had nothing to do with insanity. And so may I present, The Madwomen's Ball.

Paris France, 1885, The Salpetriere, an institute for the insane. It is here the famous Dr. Charcot will make his reputation, giving live examples on various women, showcasing hypnosis. This book features four women, one who works as a nurse at the Institute, two who are patients and a young woman from a wealthy family whose father brings her to the Institute after learning she can communicate with the dead.

We learn of life, treatment inside the Institute walls, get to know these four women with very different motives and feelings about being placed here. It is a novel of friendship, misjudgements, mistreatment and sisterhood. It emphasizes the strength of women, and the unfairness of society. It is a good story that has won many literary prizes in France and is being made into a movie by Amazon.

ARC from Netgalley.
Profile Image for Linda.
1,652 reviews1,703 followers
August 25, 2021
"In a mad world, only the mad are sane." (Akira Kurosawa)

With glazed eyes, the bevy of women cluster around the dirty windowpanes. They lean with foreheads pressed upon glass observing the streets below. They view people who scurry alone or in pairs trying to brace themselves against the fury of the wind and the cutting edges of the icy flakes. Each boasts a destination with hurried footsteps. Frazzled minds from without.....frazzled minds from within.

Victoria Mas sets her provocative novel that will illicit differing responses from the readers as they choose to turn its pages. It's March of 1885 and Mas dares us to enter into the walls of the renowned La Salpetriere Asylum for Women in Paris. It is a place of longstanding with patients raging from 13- 65 years of age. Patients who differ in their signs of distress as the widening variations of sweeping flowers in a French country field.

Mas has done explicit research. The mentally ill and the mentally challenged were only part of the residents of this stone establishment. And this was on par with the treatment of mental illness around the world both then and now. "Patients/Lunatics/Nobodies". Most asylums were holding places for females who had fallen from grace as determined by their judgmental husbands and fathers. Any woman who was particularly verbal and disagreed with the head of the household could find themselves silenced for the rest of their lives. Pursuing a career or an interest banned by society would find yourself under lock and key. More's the pity for lost lives and lost talents.

Madame Genevieve is the head nurse in longstanding for twenty years here at La Salpetriere. She follows orders given by the famous Dr. Charcot, neurologist and authority on women's mental illnesses of that time period. Charcot, and others like him, resorted to using hypnosis on women as they stood like lab rats before a crowd of male professors. The nurses subdued unruly patients with cloths soaked in ether or chloroform. Daily life within the asylum was spent subduing the uncooperative.

Genevieve remains removed from those around her, but she displays a different temperment in regard to her sister, Blandine, who passed away. She stores a treasure-trove of letters she has penned to the dead Blandine over the years. But a new patient, Eugenie, will turn her world upside down.

Eugenie has become a patient at the asylum due to her insolence against her father. Even her own grandmother turns against her when Eugenie expresses an interest in Spiritualism. Abandon all hope who enter here. And this is where Victoria Mas' novel will be taken to a higher tier of thought. We will enter into the minds and actions of both Genevieve and Eugenie. And we will view the heartbreaking realities visited upon women in those circumstances.

The Mad Women's Ball is displayed with a gorgeous cover with varying choices of colors and designs. It's translated from the original French and has won awards there. It may not be for everyone. But my take is that even though it is a work of fiction, it leans on true factions of life for so many. Perhaps awareness, in itself, is a small inlet into restoring these women sullied by those in the past.

I received a copy of The Mad Women's Ball through NetGalley for an honest review. My thanks to ABRAMS (The Overlook Press) and to Victoria Mas for the opportunity.
Profile Image for CarolG.
917 reviews542 followers
October 27, 2021
UPDATE: I watched the movie on Amazon Prime a few nights ago and really enjoyed it. This is a case where the movie was actually better than the book. The acting is excellent and we get a better idea of what life was like for the patients in the asylum.

I was intrigued mostly by the title of this book in the beginning but I really liked the story once I started reading it. Eugenie, a young woman in Paris in 1885, confesses to her grandmother that she sees dead people and is able to commune with them. Her father, an important figure in the City, is dismayed by this and commits her to The Salpetriere Asylum, a neurological clinic where she meets Genevieve who has worked as a nurse at the asylum for 20 years.

The Mad Women's Ball was held every year and involved the patients dressing up for the entertainment of some of the Paris elite. It seems it was a highlight for the patients and for the guests but for different reasons. This story is based on real people and a real place. Although I found it interesting and enjoyed the story, I had been hoping for a more in-depth look at life in the asylum. I don't particularly care for books about spiritualism but the remainder of the book was interesting. There's a movie showing on Amazon Prime based on this book and I plan to watch it after I'm done reading. I believe it's in French with English subtitles of which I'm not a big fan but it's gotten pretty good reviews so we shall see.

Just after I started reading this one, a book called "The Painted Bridge" (2012) popped up in my Goodreads newsfeed and the premise sounded similar except that the asylum in that book is in Victorian England. Reviews are mixed but I think I'd like to read it at some point for comparison's sake.

3.5 Stars rounded up!
Profile Image for Sara.
1,492 reviews432 followers
September 4, 2021
I don't really know what the point was here...

The year is 1885. In Paris, the social event of the year is the annual mad women's ball. It's the one time of the year where the bourgeoisie mingle with women who are deemed to be the cast offs of society. The women seen as inconvenient, unwanted and undesirable. Genevieve is the senior nurse at the Salpetriere asylum, in charge of caring for these women. Of logical mind, she sees her patients as objects to be studied to the talented Dr Charcot rather than people. That is until new patient Eugenie arrives. Sent to the asylum by her father, she has a special gift. A gift that will connect to two women and open Genevieve to a world beyond science.

I liked the two main characters, although the shirt length of the novel hinders their development and emotional depth quite a lot. I warned to Genevieve more, given that we see more of her backstory and upbringing withing the narrative itself. She goes through a journey throughout the novel, and overall I found her character arc quite interesting. Eugenie I found harder to like. She's rash and headstrong, purposely saying things that she knows will get her into trouble - making me less sympathetic to her plight. The situations she finds herself in are largely her own fault. Of the secondary characters, a think a lot more time could have been spent fleshing them out a bit more - especially Therese and Louise. Both had so much potential to be vividly described and fleshed out, but beyond a bit of personal history they never really are - which lessens the impact of the story some what.

My main issue with the story itself is that there isn't really much of a plot. The ending is pretty much inevitable, and it doesn't really tell me anything new beyond the fact that men are exploitative arseholes regardless of the historical period. Although I enjoyed my time reading this, I just ended up feeling a little bit flat and meh about the whole thing.
Profile Image for Marie.
997 reviews20 followers
February 3, 2021
Disappointing. This wasn't what I expected, nothing stood out for me, the characters are boring and the universe of the Salpêtrière wasn't explored properly, Charcot was barely there, it felt like the summary had almost nothing to do with the book. The writing isn't particularly good, the ending is not surprising at all. There isn't really a proper story arc in this book. Such a shame that this interesting concept was wasted.
Profile Image for Hiroto.
269 reviews66 followers
September 15, 2019
Sacrée déception. Le Bal des folles part sur deux sujets très intéressants : la place des femmes dans la société française de la fin XIXème, et leurs "folies". Ainsi, l'action se déroule à la Salpêtrière -hôpital où l'on "soigne" les aliénées, mais qui a plus une fonction d'internat qu'autre chose- et où le célèbre Dr Charcot faisait ses fameuses démonstrations de crises d'hystéries avec l'aide (consentie ou on) de ses patientes.

Le gros problème, c'est que si le contexte est très intéressant, l'autrice n'a aucune histoire à nous proposer, et très vite elle en brode une avec le personnage d'Eugénie. Eugénie est une jeune fille de très bonne famille à la personnalité affirmée et qui refuse de se limiter à ce que la société de l'époque attend d'elle (une épouse, une jument). Mais Eugénie a le malheur de confesser à sa famille qu'elle voit et entend des esprit, et son père l'interne immédiatement à la Salpêtrière pour éviter honte et déshonneur. Sauf que dans le roman, il est admis et prouvé qu'Eugénie n'est pas folle et qu'elle voit bel et bien des esprits, ce qui pour moi décrédibilise complétement le propos. Là où moi je m'attendais à lire plus sur les conditions de vie des personnages de l’hôpital, de leurs différents "traitements", etc, l'autrice en fait nous propose l'histoire d'Eugénie, enfermée à tord, qui va chercher à s'enfuir. Pourquoi avoir introduit cet élément surnaturel ? N'aurait-il pas été plus intéressant et intriguant de laisser le lecteur dans le doute quand à la prétendue folie d'Eugénie ?

Je ne peux m’empêcher de comparer le roman à deux autres ouvrages. Le premier, c'est The Ballroom de Anna Hope, dont l'action se déroule dans un asile dans l'Angleterre début XXème où là j'ai trouvé le contexte retranscrit de façon crédible. Le second, c'est Alias Grace de Margaret Atwood, pour justement le doute et le mystère qui plane dans le roman quand à la culpabilité de son personnage principal féminin, et sur le spiritisme et les croyances surnaturelles dans la haute bourgeoisie. Je ne saurais que trop vous recommander ces deux livres, qui en plus discutent également la place des femmes dans les contextes choisis.

Profile Image for Esther.
442 reviews105 followers
June 20, 2021
It is short and well-written story, discussing how terribly women were treated in the late 19th century but without being a polemic.

The narrative has a simple plot, not-overly dramatic, showing how women were punished for having opinions by being rejected by their families or even locked away, how women were totally under the control of the men in their lives, only enjoying the freedoms allowed them and not able to live life on their own terms.
And while other women can be a source of comfort and support, there are also many women willingly complicit in the oppression of their fellow females.

Although the main character is horrified at the thought of being trapped within the confines of the asylum, for many of the women, especially the poorer ones, the asylum offers them a kind of freedom. It is they only place where others have shown concern for their welfare and it is a haven of liberation from the subjugation to the whims and sexual violence of men which they suffered on the outside.
Even in the asylum the women are subject to the control and exploitation of the doctors (all male, of course) who treat the women as interesting cases rather than real human beings, disregarding their feelings and desires.

And the ball itself arouses conflicting emotions. Although it is appalling to imagine these poor women shown off as entertainment for the Paris elite the women themselves look forward to the ball, the atmosphere in the asylum becoming more calm during the time they spend preparing to enjoy a novel entertainment in fancy company within the ‘safety’ of the asylum walls.

I often don’t enjoy books that have won prizes but this is a gem

Highly recommended.

I received this book from Net Galley, in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Alex.andthebooks.
709 reviews2,854 followers
May 27, 2023
Krótka, a jednak w jakiś prosty sposób poruszająca. To nie jest lektura, ktora zmieni wasze życie, ale myślę, że wprawi w zamyślenie.
Profile Image for Geertje.
1,040 reviews
September 15, 2022
Before I begin reviewing, please know that I may be harsh because I went into this book wishing to love it. My expectations were high, because this book has won numerous prizes and the premise is right up my alley. So what went wrong?

Let’s begin with what I enjoyed. The Mad Women’s Ball is easy to read. Whenever I picked it up, I was compelled to keep reading, which is no small feat.

So why did I not love this book? For me, there are multiple problems, the biggest one being that it’s so incredibly on the nose. Nineteenth-century France freaking sucked when you were a woman, and Mas has tried to make this clear with every tool she has. Women are raped, beaten, silenced, etc. After a while, I became numb to the suffering the characters endured. This is a personal preference, but I would have liked for Mas to show us the violence of the patriarchy in more subtle ways. I thought about a scene from the movie Suffragette , in which a rich lady wishes to bail out her fellow suffragettes but needs her husband to sign the papers for her, even though the money she wishes to use is her own. Her husband, ashamed of his wife’s political views, refuses, and the two end up leaving without having paid the other women’s bail. This scene is so effective because without having to resort to extremes, it shows us the violence of the society in which these women live. No such subtlety for The Mad Women’s Ball, although in the second half of the book, Mas does try to nuance things by having two characters proclaim that they actually enjoyed their stay in the asylum. This I appreciated greatly, and it was also sorely needed to give the novel some depth.

Even so, Mas has a super clear opinion on everything. The women in this asylum are all victims of the patriarchy! They’re just misfits of society, nothing is wrong with them apart from trauma! And that is frankly insulting to Doctor Chartot, a man who actually existed and did a great deal in helping to distinguish between different neurological diseases and prove that they were in fact real diseases with physical causes. Thus, the patients actually housed in the Salpêtrière asylum suffered from a range of very real conditions still recognised today. Even the ward that housed those diagnosed with hysteria also housed those with epilepsy, of which we can say that it is beyond a doubt a real illness. I would have liked to at least see Mas acknowledge this. Additionally, I would have greatly appreciated it if Mas had used this novel to explore what madness means. Is it bound to time and place? Are there universal elements or constants? Why not write a character we would still deem mad or at least mentally disturbed and then show us that those people also deserve love and compassion and proper care? A wasted opportunity.

Furthermore, Charcot is portrayed as a sadistic man who stages elaborate shows using his patients without any regard for their well being. That he hosted such shows is correct. However, the real Charcot is so much more complicated than how Mas portrays him. He let women be his students and assistants in a time and place when that was not the norm; he vigorously advocated for people to accept that the working classes were no different from the middle and upper classes on a physical and mental level when that was very much not what those middle and upper classes believed; he argued that hysteria was by no means a female-only disease and that those afflicted from it where by no means faking it which, again, was not the norm. All of this I found out after maybe half an hour of research, so it is beyond me why Mas did not include any of this in her novel. It almost seems as if she was adverse to nuance, but that is precisely what a novel like this requires and what the time period and setting and, again, actually existing people deserve.

There’s also no suspense within this novel. Everything is told immediately (even when it should at times have been shown). Louise freezes when an intern kisses her? The reader might logically infer this is because she has suffered through some form of sexual violence, but rather than letting us work this out for our own, at least for a bit, Mas immediately tells us exactly what has happened. The matron has come to think of her patients as bothersome objects. That’s interesting! What could have happened to make her this way? Worry not, Mas will tell you straight away! Can Eugénie really communicate with spirits, or is there perhaps something else going on? Haha no of course she can see ghosts, there’s no doubt about that. There’s no subtlety, no room for interpretation on the reader’s part for the whole of this novel. Frankly, it feels very lazy.

Again, perhaps I’m unduly harsh about this. Most people who’ve left reviews here seem to have really enjoyed this novel. I simply wish I could have enjoyed it as much as they, but the utter lack of nuance made this seem like such a cheap shot at 'old doctors evil, feminism good'. A shame.
Profile Image for Janelle.
1,621 reviews344 followers
September 19, 2021
A quick read about the Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris in 1885. A hospital for ‘hysterical’ women and other mental illnesses, and every year the Lenten Ball is held there, where all the well-to-do etc can come and gawk at the madwomen. Professor Charcot famously holds lectures where he demonstrates hypnotism on patients and induces fits, in front of hundreds of male students. The treatment of problematic women and mentally ill patients in the past is still amazing to read about it, and I found this an interesting and well written story. The main characters are Genevieve, the matron who has worked there for twenty years and Eugenie, an upper class young woman who has been committed by her father. There are other important characters, patients, Louise and Therese and Eugenie’s brother, Theophile. An impressive debut novel and a beautiful cover as well.
Profile Image for Cortney -  Bookworm & Vine.
1,083 reviews257 followers
February 24, 2022
So much wasted potential!

It's a fairly short book (200 pages) so I would have expected it to be packed with interesting details and a really good story, sadly I got neither.

I always shave a little off my expectations when a book is translated into English from another language, but at the end of the day, this was just boring.

2 unenthusiastic stars
Profile Image for Cinzia DuBois.
Author 0 books3,591 followers
April 19, 2022
I refused to finish it. I was bored senseless from the very beginning it’s very dry and lacklustre writing, but I was placing fault there more on the translation than the text. Then came the on-the-nose very obvious and primary school feminist concepts which were stressed as though they were some massive revelation?

I felt like the author thought readers were too stupid to handle the most basic concepts and spoke to us as such, spoon feeding us everything rather than showing and treating the most basic 1980s understanding of feminism as it was revolutionary.

On top of that, there was something very iffy about a upper/middle class woman being wrongly out into an asylum and thus deserved to be liberated whilst the lower class women were abused in there and had a miserable time. I don’t have time for middle-class white women feminists ideas of empowerment — it’s not only embarrassing but woefully dull and certainly doesn’t make for good literature.
Profile Image for Ania.
294 reviews2,336 followers
December 11, 2022
4.5 kawał dobrej lektury, książka, która zdecydowanie zasługuje na uwagę! jednak według mnie zdecydowanie za krótka 🥹 z chęcią czytałbym o losach tych kobiet przez następne strony, jednak nie miałam takiej możliwości ;(
Profile Image for Daniel Shindler.
319 reviews204 followers
October 3, 2021
This absorbing well crafted novel transports us to Paris in 1885.France was in a period of intellectual and social upheaval in the aftermath of the 1848 revolution and its subsequent reverberations.Science had become a new form of religion and competed with Catholicism for the devotion of Parisians. The Salpetriere Hospital , headed by Jean-Martin Charcot, was in the forefront of the new fascination.The asylum treated women who were abandoned by society and deemed mad or hysterical and held public displays of hypnotism of these women.The crowning social event of the season was the Mad Women’s Ball, where Parisian socialites could mingle with these women and gawk at them up close.

Victoria Mas reimagines this historical period and creates a novel that immerses us in fin de siecle Paris,portraying the emotions and thoughts of these incarcerated women.Many of the women are neither mad nor deserving of being shut away.They live under a patriarchal system that allows men to institutionalize non conforming or confrontational women.The author’s deft touch introduces us to the women housed in the Salpetriere. Two women are central to this portrayal. Genevieve is the head nurse who has been at the asylum for twenty years.Haunted by the death of her sister, she has devoted her life to science despite the limitations her gender has placed on her talents.Eugenie is a patient who has been institutionalized by her overbearing father because of her interest in Spiritism.Although these two women have different ways of coping with their realities, they both share an unspoken bond because their talents have been stifled by a male dominated system.The gradual development of their relationship provides a lens that reveals their personalities and backstories.

The women’s differing beliefs highlight the tensions between scientific belief and spiritual intuition. As this conflict evolves we also wonder what is a safe place for women in a society that values conformity above all else.The interplay between Genevieve and Eugenie, along with the interactions of other inmates, begins to form a picture of solidarity and sometimes ironic comfort among the institutionalized women.Some of the women view the asylum as a safe haven because it protects them from male predators outside the asylum walls.Others long for escape into the wider world. We are left to wonder which set of desires is more rational.

This chasm between appearance and reality is one striking theme that runs through the novel.The author’s prose combines vivid physical description and shifting imagery and left me wondering how to separate reality from delusion.This clever creation is a jewel that draws the reader into its world and leaves one with much to ponder.4.5 stars.
Profile Image for Mel (Epic Reading).
1,114 reviews351 followers
November 10, 2021
While not as amazing as the reviews make it sound, The Mad Women’s Ball is a decent read. I enjoyed our lead gal and her conversations with ghosts. It would have been nice to feel like I knew a couple other main characters as well as we end up knowing her. Both the nurse and Louise (a ‘hysterical’ woman) are key players but I never truly felt like I knew them with as much depth as I’d have liked.
This is a shorter novel, translated from French. It could actually have been longer (shocking I know, it’s rare to wish a book was longer). I’d have liked more about our characters, their motivations, and experiences prior to being put up at the asylum.
It’s certainly tragic that, back in the day (but assuredly still happening on occasion today), that someone with power could abuse and manipulate a person and then leave them (more or less) for dead at the asylum. The doctors we encounter in The Mad Women’s Ball are historical figures, including Babinski, a famed neuroscientist (thank you Big Bang Theory for teaching me this and not needing to look up a bunch of historical fact. Lol). All our other characters are fictional to my knowledge.

Overall I’d say this will likely make a better movie (which I will watch) than a book. The plot feels very linear and the set-up will lend itself to a well written script. And so, I can’t believe I’m about to say this, maybe wait for the movie to be released?

Please note: I received an eARC from the publisher via NetGalley. This is an honest and unbiased review.
Profile Image for Natalie  all_books_great_and_small .
3,117 reviews166 followers
February 4, 2025
The Mad Womens Ball is a dark and, at times, harrowing story based on the Salpêtrière Hospital in Paris in 1885 where 'hysterical' women were sent that were deemed as mentally ill.
Genevieve is the matron at the asylum/hospital and has worked there for two decades and has the utmost respect and praise for Professor Charcot who treats the patients as well as holds lectures where he hosts demonstrations of hypnotism on the patients.
Eugenie is 19 and a woman ahead of her times. She comes from a bourgeois family and has a unique gift - she can see the dead. When Eugenie hears of a banned book,'The Book of Spirits', she hunts down a copy and finally feels she's found people like herself who she can relate to for once in her life. When she confides in her grandmother of her abilities, she is carted away to the Salpêtrière Hospital, where she crosses paths with Genevieve. Desperate to escape Eugenie pleads for Genevieves help leading both women's lives to change forever.
As the Lenten Ball (Mad womens Ball) approaches the women's spirits are high with excitement as this is the one night of the year they get to dress up and dance and live a night of normality - under the gazes of those invited come to gape and gawk at the 'Mad women'.
This book was such an eye opener into how women were seen and treated especially by men (which sadly still occurs today but not in the same ways). Many women were locked away and abused and mistreated, experimented on and damaged just because they were depressed, unwanted, grieving, born out of wedlock or outspoken to manage just afew of the reasons they were sent away.
The fact this book is based on a real asylum was very interesting, and I'll be doing further reading into this too.
Profile Image for Maria Olga Lectoraapasionada.
388 reviews139 followers
May 14, 2021
Fue una buena lectura, que me absorbió desde las primeras páginas, que no pude parar de leer porque quería saber más y más, el argumento de la novela es duro, cruel, desalmado, atroz, sin embargo esa descrito de una forma suave, amable, delicada, apacible.

La historia tiene muchas actrices pero las tres protagonistas principales sin duda son Eugénie, Louise, Geneviève, mujeres intensas, con una vidas difíciles, todas muy distintas, sin embargo coincidirán en esta cárcel de mujeres, esos lugares llamados manicomios, porque esto perdonen no era un hospital, la falta de libertad, los aislamientos no producen nada bueno, todo lo contrario matan en vida.

Por esos años de 1885 los padres se deshacían de su hijas, lo maridos abandonaban a sus mujeres en esos tétricos lugares, por tener su propias ideas, por ser sensibles en temas que según ellos no las convenía, o no estimaban que era lo correcto.

Estas páginas me recordaron un poco a la vida de Juana de Castilla, no es el mismo siglo, no es España, es Francia, aunque los sucesos narrados son muy similares, no se las encerraba en castillos, se las encerraba en hospitales para mujeres, por aquello de que en esos tiempos atrás la mujer tenía que ser sumisa, si no era así se las consideraba locas, prohibiéndolas las libertad, la vida, impidiéndolas exponer sus ideas, solo había una camino, el camino de la obediencia, el cual si no cumplían eran expulsadas de la vida.

En estas páginas aun creo que es peor lo que las hacían, además de apartarlas de la vida, las hacían toda clase de experimentos o más bien aberraciones con ellas, abriendo las puertas como si de un espectáculo se tratase, donde solo acudían hombres, provocándolas reacciones mediante medicinas llevándoles a estados de epilepsias.

A Louise la ingresan allí después de ser violada por su tío con solo 16 años y estar sometida constantemente a los malos tratos por parte de su tía.

Eugénie tiene una inteligencia superior, la entusiasma leer, la apasiona todo lo que tenga que ver con los espíritus, no está de acuerdo con lo que le impone su padre, ella no quiere casarse y tener hijos ella quiere otra vida, al contar un secreto a su abuela, la abuela se lo comunica al padre, engañada es trasladada a ese lugar.

Geneviève es la enfermera de esa cárcel, es la única que mira a las mujeres que residen allí como personas, no como experimentos, es esa persona afable que entre tanta mandad, siempre aparece por arte de magia en las vidas de una inmensidad de personas.

Geneviève se involucrara hasta el punto de arriesgar su trabajo y su propia vida por salvar aunque sea a una de ellas.

Me olvidaba de Théophile, este muchacho también entrara en el plan junto a Geneviève, para salvar a una de estas mujeres.

La descripción de estos sucesos que ocurrían por esos años me lleno de gran indignación, rabia e impotencia, diría un sinfín de cosas pero mejor me estoy calladita, también decir que en estas páginas están expuestos estos sucesos, porque la historia está para que se conozca, para que no se comentan estas salvajadas nunca más, quizás en esta novela el nombre exacto del mal llamado hospital no es real, pero que hubo esta clase de lugares para mujeres si es real, da igual el nombre, lo importante es contar lo que sucedió.

Se hace una mención a una lectura que lleva como título “El libro de los espíritus” busque por internet, ya tengo el libro en mi poder.

Fue una lectura a pesar del tema tratado, llena de sentido y sensibilidad, paginas narradas delicadamente con mucho amor, cariño, sentimiento, descrito con el alma, para colarse en lo más profundo del corazón, es de esas historias que no se olvidan fácilmente.



Posdata: Pero nunca olvidéis que la historia que cuenta un libro no siempre es igual.



Extractos del libro:



La enfermedad deshumaniza, convierte a esas mujeres en marionetas a merced de unos síntomas grotescos, en flácidos peleles en manos de unos doctores que las manejan y les examinan todos los pliegues de la piel, en animales estúpidos que sólo despiertan un interés clínico.


¿Por qué creer en Dios está bien y creer en los espíritus no?

La cuestión es que ustedes temen lo que no conocen. Y pretenden curar a la gente.

Las promesas sólo comprometen a quien se las cree.

La indignación es un sentimiento avasallador, y no conviene malgastarlo.

Pero a veces mentir, más que una necesidad, es un consuelo.

El decorado es tal que uno desearía que durara para siempre.

Creo... que nunca he estado fuera. Que siempre he estado aquí.
Profile Image for Mara.
1,948 reviews4,322 followers
September 3, 2021
3.5 stars - A short historical novel that packs a real punch. Playing on the real life figures in the history of medicine in France, this explores how societies conceptualize mental illness or neurodiveristy, as well as how those concepts change when they are applied to women
Profile Image for Miya (severe pain struggles, slower at the moment).
451 reviews148 followers
December 6, 2021
TW for just about everything, so double check this one before reading.

I liked this. It was upsetting...unsettling and sometimes creepy which kept me interested, but sometimes it felt slow at least to me. I look forward to watching the film to see how they portray the characters.
Profile Image for Sarah-Hope.
1,470 reviews209 followers
December 26, 2021
Some books are based on such an interesting premise that I can't wait to read them. Sometimes there's a brilliant payoff in discovering a great author or an new subgenre; other times the whole experience is meh. Victoria Mas' The Mad Women's Ball is certainly based on an interesting premise. And it is most definitely NOT meh.

Set in late 19th Century Paris, the novel follows several characters connected—through employment or institutionalization—to the Salpetriere Asylum. For its time, Salpetriere is ground-breaking. The new medical "tool" of hypnotism is being used to study female madness. Hundreds of medical men (and only men) gather to see Dr. Charcot, who directs Salpetriere, induce seizures in his patients, for reasons of medical research, of course.

The ball of the title is an annual event which the wealthiest, most powerful Parisians attend for a chance to rub shoulders with "madwomen," who for one night are allowed to dress in finery and mingle with those living outside the asylum. Yes, the mad women's ball was a real event. You can read more about it here: https://victorianparis.wordpress.com/...

Of course, many of the mad women aren't mad at all. This is an era when it's easy for a man to "dispose" of an inconvenient wife, mother, or daughter by taking her to Salpetriere. There's Therese, a murderess with an excellent reason for her crime; Louise, subjected to her uncle's sexual abuse; and Eugenie, who is visited by the dead. Eugenie has been committed by her father—a wealthy authoritarian and rationalist—who disowns her shortly after she confesses her "gift" to her beloved grandmother.

The Mad Women's Ball explores two topics: perceptions of female madness and the possibility of spirit communication. The novel's characters have strong opinions about each. Victoria Mas shows us their many different responses when those opinions are challenged.

The Mad Women's Ball succeeds as a fast-paced story of adversity and (occasional) triumph. It also gives readers a great deal to chew over regarding history, what it means to be female, and their own perceptions. I received a free electronic review copy of this title from the publisher via NetGalley; the opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Olivia (Stories For Coffee).
716 reviews6,293 followers
January 17, 2022
A fantastic, harrowing glimpse into the world of an 1800s asylum highlighting the mistreatment of women.

Short in length, this novel packs a punch and educated me about a real-life institution that women were trapped in against their will to be ridiculed, prodded, and silenced.

Mas paints a scene simplistically, yet captured my attention from beginning to end, even if the latter portion of the book was a bit rushed and could have been fleshed out a bit.



TW: Self-harm, sexual assault
Profile Image for Louise.
1,106 reviews258 followers
August 19, 2024
Paris, 1885: Salpetriere is a place where women are sent, whether they would be considered mentally ill or not in today’s world. Sometimes, they were sent there by their fathers if they showed too much independence, or some other “fatal flaw” of the times. Others were legitimately in need of psychiatric care. Stories like this one reinforce my feeling that, while I love reading about earlier time periods, I would NOT want to go back and live in them as a woman.

This book, while fictional, is based on a real asylum/hospital for women in Paris, and includes several real people in its story, including Dr. Jean-Martin Charcot, under whose leadership Salpetriere “became celebrated as a neuropsychiatric teaching centre” per Wikipedia. The main characters, Eugenie, Louise and Genevieve are fictional, however.

Unfortunately, I found the book to be slow moving and the characters didn’t pull me in. One main character (my namesake, Louise) didn’t seem to have much reason to be in the book until the very end, and even then, I think we could have done without her. There wasn’t much of a story, to be honest. It seemed to be more of a “beat the drum for how awful women were treated at that time.” The writing style seemed stiff and overly wordy, with details descriptions of everything. This is a translated work but I have to assume that the translator did a good job, and that the writing style is the author’s. I appreciated learning about a place that actually existed, which has morphed into a more ‘regular’ hospital. The titular ball was an interesting tidbit, but it wasn’t enough of an event to name the book for it.

Thank you to NetGalley and The Overlook Press for the opportunity to read a review copy of this book. All opinions are my own.
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