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The Porcelain Dove, or, Constancy's Reward

von Delia Sherman

MitgliederRezensionenBeliebtheitDurchschnittliche BewertungDiskussionen
2005136,272 (3.5)7
"The magic of history and the enchantment of an extraordinary story come together in this novel of beguiling romance and dazzling revelation." "Eighteenth-century France is the setting - a time and a place where age-old superstitions shadow an age of enlightenment, where the minuet of aristocratic life is deaf to the approaching drumbeats of revolution, where elegance masks depravity and licentiousness makes mockery of love. Against this background, Berthe Duvet, maid to Adele du Fourchet, later Mme la duchesse de Malvoeux, tells her tale of a doomed society and of a family seeking to break a terrible curse." "Berthe is an orphan child brought up in the green rooms of the Paris theatre when she enters the service of the beautiful young girl who is to be her lifelong mistress and charge. Her sharp eyes and sharper tongue record the intrigues and amours of a world of privilege and perversity, in which she and Adele must come of age in very different ways. Then, with Adele's marriage to the mysterious duc de Malvoeux, Berthe takes us to a place a world away from the Paris of Rousseau, du Barry and de Sade - the ducal chateau Beauxpres, hidden deep in the primitive Jura mountains of France, wolf-haunted, rooted in the memory of blood." "Into this realm of legends and dark sorceries comes a scorned beggar with a fearful prophecy. Unless the House of Malvoeux finds and possesses a fabulous porcelain dove, the noble family faces madness and ruin. Yet even as the quest for the dove begins, the members of the family follow their own destinies and desires. The duc retreats to his aviary; the duchesse into parties and flirtations. One son heeds the call of God; another is tempted by Satanic sensuality. And a daughter grows up to be both rebel and savior of the family, fulfilling the quest even as the storm of the French Revolution breaks." "Vivid in its recreation of a vanished age and delightfully iconoclastic in its view of women and history, this rare and exhilarating reading adventure is a triumph of the imagination."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved… (mehr)
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This novel was an enjoyable mix of historical fiction and light fantasy, set in the countryside of pre-revolutionary France. It has led me to start reading similar books in the fantasy genre which I am enjoying very much. My first introduction to fantasy was Tolkien, and to be honest; all those non-human creature characters were a distraction from the story. So perhaps this makes me a low-brow wussy fantasy reader, but I don't care, I really like these adult fairy tales with their not-so-happily-ever-after endings. After all, these books were written for readers like me, I might as well read them. ( )
  Equestrienne | Jan 5, 2021 |
This is an unusual fantasy set in a version of eighteenth century France, told by a chaber maid in the service of a daughter of a duke whose little duchy becomes suspended in time. ( )
  antiquary | Dec 24, 2017 |
This mostly reads like a historical novel set in pre-revolutionary France, but fantastical elements slowly creep into the plot. I absolutely adored the main character--I wanted her to be a friend of mine, and I wanted her to figure out why she liked cuddling and kissing her mistress so much. Her unwitting lesbian love is *adorable*.
( )
  wealhtheowwylfing | Feb 29, 2016 |
Back in 18th Century France, just at the cusp of the Revolution, a small but wealthy country estate is hit by a fairy curse - and the few people within are trapped. Immortal, comfortable, all their needs seen to by invisible servitors - but they cannot leave. There's little to do to pass the years but put on plays and amusements, and well, to cultivate the acquaintance of the local ghosts.
Berthe, who was once a maid in the house (centuries of being trapped in a small group has done quite a bit to erode class lines), at the ghost Colette's request, writes the twisted tale of how they all came to be caught like flies in amber.
I really enjoyed this book. (I was particularly delighted by it after being really disappointed by Sherman's 'Changeling.') The setting is vivid and fully realized, the flavor of the writing is wonderfully wry and witty, and the cast of crazed and odd characters is fascinating. It's not so fast-moving and does give the reader a sense of stasis - but after all, the characters are caught in such a stasis.
But I loved it - all of the comedy-of-manners-esque interactions, the bizarre obsessions and hopeless quests, and oh yes, how magical objects are something you just might choose to collect, like painted fans or decorative china plates. (I want a cabinet des Fées in my house!)
I'd highly recommend this for anyone who liked Ellen Kushner's 'Riverside' series (Sherman collaborated on one of them). ( )
  AltheaAnn | Feb 9, 2016 |
The Porcelain Dove is a fantasy of manners that takes place in France in the late eighteenth century. It is told from the point of view of Berthe Duvet, a duchess' chambermaid. She is telling the story of how she came to be given immortality in a never changing castle where the inhabitants are waited upon by bodiless hands and entertained by demons. It is a story about how her master came to be cursed and how the curse was broken and how she found herself living in a version of "happily ever after." The back drop of the story is France leading up to and during the French revolution. I really enjoyed the book, it was like reading historical fiction and a fairy tale in one. There were times where the story went slow for me and I grew impatient for the magical parts, but over all it was a good read. Part of me was unsatisfied with not knowing what happened to some characters (since the story was told in first person, if Berthe did not know it neither did the reader), but another part of me was happy that it did not tie up all the lose ends too neatly. I would recommend it to anyone that appreciates the genre, especially if you liked Sorcery and Cecelia or Jonathan Strange & Mr. Norrell. ( )
  Cora-R | Jan 13, 2016 |
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"The magic of history and the enchantment of an extraordinary story come together in this novel of beguiling romance and dazzling revelation." "Eighteenth-century France is the setting - a time and a place where age-old superstitions shadow an age of enlightenment, where the minuet of aristocratic life is deaf to the approaching drumbeats of revolution, where elegance masks depravity and licentiousness makes mockery of love. Against this background, Berthe Duvet, maid to Adele du Fourchet, later Mme la duchesse de Malvoeux, tells her tale of a doomed society and of a family seeking to break a terrible curse." "Berthe is an orphan child brought up in the green rooms of the Paris theatre when she enters the service of the beautiful young girl who is to be her lifelong mistress and charge. Her sharp eyes and sharper tongue record the intrigues and amours of a world of privilege and perversity, in which she and Adele must come of age in very different ways. Then, with Adele's marriage to the mysterious duc de Malvoeux, Berthe takes us to a place a world away from the Paris of Rousseau, du Barry and de Sade - the ducal chateau Beauxpres, hidden deep in the primitive Jura mountains of France, wolf-haunted, rooted in the memory of blood." "Into this realm of legends and dark sorceries comes a scorned beggar with a fearful prophecy. Unless the House of Malvoeux finds and possesses a fabulous porcelain dove, the noble family faces madness and ruin. Yet even as the quest for the dove begins, the members of the family follow their own destinies and desires. The duc retreats to his aviary; the duchesse into parties and flirtations. One son heeds the call of God; another is tempted by Satanic sensuality. And a daughter grows up to be both rebel and savior of the family, fulfilling the quest even as the storm of the French Revolution breaks." "Vivid in its recreation of a vanished age and delightfully iconoclastic in its view of women and history, this rare and exhilarating reading adventure is a triumph of the imagination."--BOOK JACKET.Title Summary field provided by Blackwell North America, Inc. All Rights Reserved

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