Sarah Leipciger writes a beautifully imagined novel of life, love, loss, grief, sorrow and despair, intertwining the themes of air, the precious breath of life itself, water, death, and mortality. She weaves fact and fiction into her delicate connections between the L'Inconnue de la Seine, the unknown young woman who commits suicide in the River Seine in 1899, a Norwegian toy maker working in soft plastics in the 1950s, Pieter Akrehamn, hollowed out by grief from the loss of his beloved little boy, Bear, and the more contemporary collector of stories and journalist, the Canadian Anouk, born with Cystic Fibrosis, drowning in her own lungs, living a life of restrictions and limitations, in constant danger, managing to exceed the expectations of her life span to face the risks of undergoing a lung transplant at the age of 40 for the chance to really live and breathe. They are the rivers, the seas, the salt, the lakes, the breath, in the inextricable circles of life and death, where drowning is a quiet, private and unremarkable affair.
This story shifts from past and present in a non-linear narrative, recounting the making of the death mask of the L'Inconnue, a mask of a young woman transcending time and death to serve as a muse to countless writers. Her mask goes on to serve as the inspiration, she is to be kissed by millions in the future, used by and the source of Pieter's Rescuci Anne, the doll used to train people for lifesaving CPR, commissioned by two Baltimore anesthetists, responsible for going on to save an enormous number of individuals globally. The author provides a backstory for L'Inconnue, a life of doomed love, blackmail and shame, a birth that meant death for her mother, with flashbacks of her childhood. She takes up a position in Paris as a companion to the paranoid Madame Debord, suspecting everyone of being a thief, weighed down by a history of 7 pregnancies, all lost. Anouk is the wild river girl, willing to risk all to swim, cared for by mother, Nora, homesick for Toronto, and her father, Red, who dies when she is 19 of pancreatic cancer.
Tinged with a sense of melancholy, Leipciger captures with skill the characters she creates, drawing on actual events and history for her compelling and tantalisingly timeless storytelling of the waters of life and death, the necessity and fragility of breath. She immerses us in the lives of L'Inconnue, Pieter, Anouk and Rescuci Anne, culminating in the final connection of Camille Debord. Amidst the background of the landscape of rivers and the sea, so fundamental to humans, Leipciger animates her characters lives with her rich and melodic descriptions and artful prose so beautifully. A wonderfully riveting read that I recommend highly. Many thanks to Random House Transworld for an ARC.