Synopses & Reviews
A young woman in flight from her past, and an old woman whose secrets are contained in the grave.... With this configuration, Kathryn Davis begins a novel of true bravura--about opera, adultery, and murder. In upstate New York, Frances Thorn waits tables in a diner, despite her privileged background, and raises her twin daughters without the presence or even the memory of their father. These puzzling circumstances are made stranger still, and inalterably changed, when she meets an elderly Danish woman named Helle Ten Brix, a renowned composer of operas now living with relatives in the same small town. At the heart of this peculiar friendship is a folktale, later retold by Hans Christian Andersen, about a prideful girl: Rather than ruin her new shoes while crossing the treacherous bogs, she uses the loaf of bread intended as a present for her parents as a stepping-stone--only to be condemned for her arrogance to a horrible fate, trapped at the bottom of the bog forever. She is also the subject of Helle's final opera, left unfinished at her death and willed, along with the rest of her music, to Frances. From this curious legacy Frances must not only unravel the mysteries of the composer's life and work, but also confront the fateful love triangle she and Helle came to share.