The offbeat second daughter of a French mother and a Montana-born Marine recounts her struggles and romances in this contemporary novel.
In a Manhattan coffee shop, a writer named Burgess shares a table with Johanna von Eschenbach, a stranger. She reveals she has been wishing to tell her life story, so Burgess and Johanna meet for recording sessions, which result in the first-person novel that follows. Johanna begins her tale describing how she is the child of stunning Frenchwoman Marie-Aude and handsome Robert von Eschenbach, a Marine of German descent. Johanna and her older sister, Roberta, live in Wisconsin, where Marie-Aude has attained a post as a university professor. Johanna’s tempestuous parents finally separate when she is 2 years old, and she spends time in Montana with Robert when he is on leave. Her mother, also a talented pianist, favors the more traditionally attractive and accomplished Roberta. Thus, Johanna “learned very young that Roberta was Mom’s girl, and I was Dad’s.” Johanna becomes an adventurous sportswoman and spunky “Montana cowgirl” under Robert’s tutelage, at one point pulling out a shotgun from behind a bar as her strong yet gentle father seeks to defuse obnoxious patrons. Then, when Johanna is 12, her Montana and Wisconsin life balance shatters. She manages to move toward a surprising new closeness with her mother and then, after humiliating and healing sexual encounters near the end of high school, continues on to college and then a corporate law career. Along the way, she connects with several men, including someone similar to her father who also happens to have enduring ties to Roberta. Later, Johanna, facing physical challenges, experiences deep despair but then bright hope for the future.
Author Burgess notes that this book is a “first excursion into biographic story-telling” after penning some fantasy and “adventure romance” novels. Johanna’s story is certainly action-packed, with the fictional Burgess of the prologue at one point rightly noting that her tale is “an emotional rollercoaster.” This novel is a rather rollicking melodrama of “what’s going to happen next?” to Johanna, with her ending up having wide-ranging and exciting experiences, including romances with a struggling but soon-to-be famous Irish singer and a rich Swiss banker. Both affairs result in her taking the stage to participate in musical performances. Johanna is an appealing hero, not only pulling out that shotgun, but also waving a shovel to warn off attackers of a nerdy boyfriend. She brushes off being described in high school as someone “who looks like a boy in drag” by noting “my tits are small...I am what I am.” But the story gets a bit overstuffed with plot points, with two near rapes and two bouts of cancer to contend with, plus the uncovering of a love child. The period setting of the tale is a bit hazy, although texting is mentioned. Overall, this story is pulled along by its never-boring first-person protagonist, who lives up to how the fictional Burgess describes her: “There was something about her that arrested my eye, made me want to know her.”
A richly detailed, if rather dizzying, tale of a spirited hero’s adventures.