Copyright Date:
2021
Edition Date:
2021
Release Date:
03/16/21
ISBN:
1-88328-595-X
ISBN 13:
978-1-88328-595-1
Dewey:
Fic
Language:
English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews
Fleeing the shock of her husband's infidelities, a Midwestern librarian embarks on a solo trip to Europe that will change her life in unexpected ways.Sitting in Montreal's airport awaiting her flight to Paris, Wisconsinite Betsy is acutely aware of her own lack of sophistication. "Each time she heard French spoken she thought reflexively that everyone around her was more cultured." It's 1981, and 32-year-old Betsy had spent most of the 1970s as a naïve and clueless wife until the discovery of Greg's betrayal sent her to divorce court, library school, and now her first trans-Atlantic flight. A casual conversation with a handsome Muslim man she had been observing eases Betsy's anxieties and renews her confidence: "Already she had made it out of the United States onto foreign soil and into her first adventure." Betsy's subsequent encounters-a French consultant's failed attempt at seduction in a train compartment; an American trio's plot to entice Betsy into a ménage à quatre in Florence; a Lake Como hotel owner's clumsily aggressive pursuit-prove more disappointing until a romantic rescue from a Dublin riot by a handsome Irishman spurs her to make her own destiny. How Betsy finds peace is the touching, if somewhat predictable, conclusion. Hermes' unusually structured narrative alternates Betsy's journey with chapters offering the perspectives of the people she meets. Some of these stories were originally published separately, so they don't always seamlessly mesh with the main storyline. The author writes with wit and flair, however, and she vividly evokes the ups (the beauty of a misty evening at Lake Como) and downs (a lonely night in a gritty Le Havre hotel) of European travel.A romantic escape to savor.
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Hermes (The Phoenix Nest) delivers a breezy travelogue of a woman-s vacation in Europe, her first trip away from home. A native of Milwaukee, Wis., middle-aged Betsy Baumgartner is recently divorced from her philandering professor of a husband and has finally finished her master-s of library science when she decides to take a solo trip to get away from what she used to be: -A comfort. A convenience. A wife.- It-s the early 1980s and her adventure begins at the airport, where she meets Kassim, a handsome Canadian Muslim man. This is the first of several interactions with travelers and locals as she makes her way to France, then Italy, and finally Ireland, where she meets a potential love interest and navigates an Irish Republican riot before returning home. After each meeting, Hermes injects a chapter from the stranger-s point of view, beginning with a story of Kassim-s past as a museum curator in Beirut before he fled from the civil war. These portrayals are meant to go deeper than Betsy-s naive perception, but their expository details don-t make the characters feel very lifelike. The account of Betsy-s eye-opening travels works much better, credibly tracking her growth. Readers who can get past the clunky bits will find some pleasant escapist fare. Agent: Gail Hochman, Brandt & Hochman. (Mar.)
At thirty-two, Betsy is sheltered. Sheltered by a close-knit family, Catholic schools, college in her hometown, and a marriage at 20. It takes the discovery of her husband’s serial philandering to open her eyes and push her out of the nest. It’s the summer of 1981, Betsy grabs a backpack and a few good books and puts distance—geographically and emotionally—between herself and the life she knew in the American Midwest. She begins to make her own decisions: about cities, hotels, and dinner entrées. At airports, on trains, and in pensiones, Betsy takes her first steps into independence as she negotiates the brief, but intense relationships travelers have.
Armed with a book of travelers’ phrases and a Swiss Army Knife, she brushes up against possibilities for connection, almost entering the life stories of the strangers she chances upon and whose paths we follow in alternating chapters. We become acquainted with a devout Muslim on a pilgrimage, a French financier raised on a rabbit farm, a lawyer on a solo honeymoon, a Pakistani gambler, a beguiling American threesome en route to Venice, an Italian hotel owner on Lake Como, and a passionate Irish protestor who literally carries her to safety from the streets of Dublin. Finally, back home, Betsy comes to the startling realization that her journey is only just beginning.