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Thursday, January 16, 2014

Book Review: Becoming Josephine by Heather Webb

becoming josephine

Becoming Josephine by Heather Webb
ARC, eBook, 320 pages
Plume
December 31, 2013
★★★½☆☆

Genre: Historical Fiction

Source: Received from publisher for review as part of HFVBT tour

“A sweeping historical debut about the Creole socialite who transformed herself into an empress.

Readers are fascinated with the wives of famous men. In Becoming Josephine, debut novelist Heather Webb follows Rose Tascher as she sails from her Martinique plantation to Paris, eager to enjoy an elegant life at the royal court. Once there, however, Rose’s aristocratic soldier-husband dashes her dreams by abandoning her amid the tumult of the French Revolution. After narrowly escaping death, Rose reinvents herself as Josephine, a beautiful socialite wooed by an awkward suitor—Napoleon Bonaparte.”

I have heard a lot about Josephine in my time reading historical fiction, but I have not read a book about her – despite owning the trilogy by Sandra Gulland for several years now. My fascination has never been with fiction set in France nor Napoleon in general. However, I did find Josephine fascinating in Webb’s novel.

First of all, this woman was pretty amazing. She survived the French Revolution (just barely!), was successful as a businesswoman, was married twice, and was beloved by most of France. She had to reinvent herself so many times and continued to make her way in the world. I appreciated that she was a woman of substance and not entirely superficial. By contrast, I still very much dislike Napoleon – and I’m sure that is not because of the author’s portrayal of him, as she was fairly even handed with his characterization. Webb did an excellent job of getting into Josephine’s head.

Webb also did an excellent job creating a truly atmospheric France. In every scene I could clearly picture what has happening and what it looked like – from the beauty of pastoral Malmaison to the desecrated and vandalized Tulieries. You also can feel what the characters are experiencing as if you were there; one scene where they are hiding in the basement during The Terror and their fear stands out vividly in my mind.

One area that I thought could be stronger was the pacing of the novel. Toward the beginning of the novel it felt uneven. Very, very quickly we were introduced to the characters and events in Martinique and then moved on. I didn’t make the connections here with Josephine’s family and homeland/culture that I think was intended. Thus, I didn’t care much when tragedies struck

there. It was still a little awkward through her first marriage. The novel really found its stride around the Revolution. From that point it seemed smoother sailing.

Overall, I appreciated this perspective of Josephine as Webb really gets at her soul and character where I think many other authors gloss over her, especially her early life, choosing instead to focus on her time as wife of Napoleon. I would certainly recommend this book to fans of French history and those who want to know more about this woman.

This is the debut novel for author Heather Webb. You can visit Heather’s website or blog for additional information about the book.

Reviews of this book by other bloggers:

Here are some choices for purchasing the book: Amazon, B&N, RJ Julia (my fav indie bookstore).

Becoming Josephine_Tour Banner_FINAL

You can follow along with the rest of the blog tour by visiting the HFVBT website or on Twitter with the following hashtag: #BecomingJosephineTour.

I also have a giveaway for US and Canada residents courtesy of the HFVBT tour.  Make entries through the Rafflecopter below.  Last day to enter is February 2nd, 2014.  Good luck!

a Rafflecopter giveaway

 

Copyright © 2014 by The Maiden’s Court

10 comments:

  1. This is one I've really been wanting to read. I'm happy to know you recommend it.

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  2. This is just my type of book!thanks for giveaway.

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  3. I can't wait to read this! Thanks for the giveaway!

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  4. Era of the French Revolution is a favorite HF setting. This book sounds so interesting.

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    1. If this is an era you like then you will likely enjoy this book.

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  5. I love reading about Josephine, "Becoming Josephine" sounds like a winner!

    DeniseK1 at Outlook dot com

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  6. Great review, Heather. I also enjoyed this one but, like you, had issues with the pacing at the beginning of the novel (I also had issues with the pacing of the end). I enjoyed Webb's writing style and felt she did a great job bringing Josephine to life. Since you mentioned you have Sandra Gulland's Josephine B trilogy waiting to be read I have to highly recommend it as the books are by far and away my favourite novels featuring Josephine (In general, I'm not much of a fan of French Revolution-era historical fiction either).

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    1. Thanks for the recommendation. I didn't mind the pacing at the end as much, but it was a little fast paced and I would have liked a little bit more of a conclusion too.

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  7. My knowledge of Napoleon and Josephine's relationship essentially comes from the 80's television miniseries starring Armand Assante and Jacqueline Bissett. Because that aired a long time ago, my recollections are rather vague, but I do know (based in part on your review) that I'd like to read the book to refresh my memory and learn more.

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    1. Thanks for pointing out the miniseries - I must have missed that one when I did my Caught on Tape segment about Napoleon.

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