Harold’s historical novel follows an American-expat Civil War widow living in Paris during its heady, La Belle Epoque days.
Anna Kneeland Haggerty Shaw came to Paris with her family close to 20 years ago. Now, in May of 1892, at 56 years of age, she finds herself for the first time totally on her own, no longer responsible for being the dutiful daughter or attentive aunt. It has been almost 30 years since Anna was widowed after barely three months of marriage—her husband Robert Gould Shaw died a hero, shot while commanding the 54th Massachusetts infantry, the Union’s first Black Negro regiment. At the conclusion of a Debussy piano recital, Annie hears a voice calling out her name. It is that of Julia Shaw Greene, Robert’s aunt, who Annie has not seen in many years, even though Julia is also an American expat living in Paris. It is a fortuitous meeting that leads to a close friendship. Julia introduces Annie to Henrietta Reubell’s salon, where wealthy intellectuals and art aficionados mingle joyfully and a bit mischievously with the struggling artists in search of patronage (“she attracts a rather fascinating circle”). Immersed in the buoyant, irreverent crowd, Annie sees the glimmer of a new path she can follow, one which may allow her to express her own artistic talents and participate in the freedoms that Paris has to offer. In Harold’s tender, frothy, and witty novel, populated by an eclectic group of Bohemian artists, Paris itself occupies a prominent role. When Annie learns that her dreaded former mother-in-law intends to visit and (gasp) perhaps move in next door, the humor is kicked up a few notches as Annie and her friends devise ways to shock the old lady into returning to America. Through acerbic social commentary and biting dialogue, the author takes readers on entertaining tours of artists’ studios and one or two dens of iniquity. Elaborate descriptions of the fashions, foods, and lifestyles that made Paris the center of the arts and social rebelliousness of the era are peppered throughout, along with thought-provoking pre– and post–Civil War historical tidbits.
Intriguing and enjoyable, with an engaging female protagonist.