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Summary
Summary
From the author of the best-selling Le Divorce and Le Mariage , a comedy of contemporary manners, morals, (ex)marriages, and motherhood (past, present, and future)--about an American woman leaving her 20-year marriage to her French second husband, returning to her native San Francisco and to the entwining lives of her children and grandchildren. "Delightful"--Claire Messud ( Harper's Magazine ); "Razor-sharp prose and astute observations ... a treat"-- Publishers Weekly (starred review).
Lorna Mott Dumas, small, pretty, high-strung, the epitome of a successful woman--lovely offspring, grandchildren, health, a French husband, a delightful house and an independent career as an admired art lecturer involving travel and public appearances, expensive clothes. She's a woman with an uncomplicated, sociable nature and an intellectual life.
But in an impulsive and planned decision, Lorna has decided to leave her husband, a notorious tombeur (seducer), and his small ancestral village in France, and return to America, much more suited to her temperament than the rectitude of formal starchy France. For Lorna, a beautiful idyll is over, finished, done . . .
In Lorna Mott Comes Home, Diane Johnson brings us into the dreamy, anxiety-filled American world of Lorna Mott Dumas, where much has changed and where she struggles to create a new life to support herself. Into the mix--her ex-husband, and the father of her three grown children (all supportive), and grandchildren with their own troubles (money, divorce, real estate, living on the fringe; a thriving software enterprise; a missing child in the far east; grandchildren--new hostages to fortune; and, one, 15 years old, a golden girl yet always different, diagnosed at a young age with diabetes, and now pregnant and determined to have the child) . . .
In the midst of a large cast, the precarious balance of comedy and tragedy, happiness and anxiety, contentment and striving, generosity and greed, love and sex, Diane Johnson, our Edith Wharton of expat life, comes home to America to deftly, irresistibly portray, with the lightest of touch, the way we live now.
Reviews (3)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Johnson (Flyover Lives: A Memoir) makes a welcome return to her wheelhouse in this propulsive domestic dramedy of manners. Having lived for more that 20 years in a village with the "exigent rectitude of formal, starchy France," Lorna Mott Dumas leaves her philandering husband, onetime museum curator Armand-Loup, whose life consists of "sex, cassoulet and Bordeaux," to return home to San Francisco, hoping to reboot her floundering professional life as an academic, establish a career on the lecture circuit, and reconnect with three grown children from her failed first marriage. Prime among the crises and misfortunes she encounters are Lorna's pregnant and diabetic 15-year old granddaughter, Gilda. Lorna's relationship with Gilda becomes a focus of the narrative, and it gradually gives her a sense of purpose. Meanwhile, Lorna may have left France behind, but it didn't leave her. After a mudslide disinters the bones of a famous American painter back in the French village where she lived, Lorna is contacted by French police, entangling her in legal problems that eventually intertwine both story lines. Johnson's usual razor-sharp prose and astute observations are on full display as she tweaks comic incidents arising out of her characters' relationships. This provocative family chronicle resolves in a poignant ending with prospects for a promising sequel. The author's fans are in for a treat. (Apr.)
Booklist Review
Art historian Lorna Mott is leaving her French husband of 18 years and their beloved home in Pont-les-Puits, France. On the way out of town, in a foretaste of the delightfully absurd plot to come, she stops to walk among dislodged corpses and bones unearthed from the town's cemetery in a storm the night before. She wonders if this is a sign that events can take unexpected turns. Of course, they do in incisive novelist Johnson's new comedy of manners. Lorna, nearly 60, returns to San Francisco, where her three hapless children live as well as her remarried ex-husband, his uber-wealthy second wife, and their ethereal 15-year-old albino daughter. Seasoning the story are Lorna's children's significant others and her grandchild, old and new acquaintances, and a ubiquitous real estate agent and her son. Johnson gently but deftly skewers everyone as they scheme for financial gain and languorously search for meaning and happiness. Can Lorna find both by restarting her life and career in an early Obama-era America she hardly recognizes and that compares unfavorably to the bucolic existence she's left behind in France?
Library Journal Review
A past mistress of the comedy of manners, as evidenced by her award-nominated Le Divorce and Le Marriage, Johnson returns with a genial story exploring the everyday scrapes and inconveniences of late middle age before averring that "sometimes, though rarely, things sort themselves out." Sixtyish American Lorna Mott is married to a Frenchman whose apparent philandering she has found tiring; she decides to leave him, returning home to San Francisco. She's determined to start life anew, relaunching a languishing art history career and attending to her three grown children. There's Peggy, divorced and struggling, with bright-eyed teenage daughter Julie; the successful Curt, who abandoned his family and vanished to Thailand after suffering a terrible accident; and troubled middle child Hams. Lorna's first husband, Ran, pointedly refuses to help them, and though Lorna hasn't seen him for decades, in the end she'll be wrapped up with his new family as well, even as she realizes that she's out of touch with the art world and the realities of contemporary urban American life. Maybe she's not so ready for what's next. VERDICT The crises here aren't huge, but they are real and insightfully played as Johnson delivers a satisfying understanding of life's constant vagaries.