Book Review: Le Mariage
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Le Mariage
by Diane Johnson
Dutton, 322 pp., $23.95
Johnson writes like a 20th-century Jane Austen, all rapt observation and wry comment. Close in tone and spirit to her bestselling Le Divorce (1998), Le Mariage is a fascinating, farcical intellectual froth involving Franco-American interpersonal relationships and the many ways they can go wrong. On the way to the altar, young, enterprising Frenchwoman Anne-Sophie and her intended, the gently employed American writer Tim Nolinger, unsuspectingly become involved in a crime involving an internationally famous movie director, his young, beautiful, and unsatisfied wife, a stolen manuscript, a missing passport, an escaped fugitive in Anne-Sophie’s office, chateau guests who won’t leave, and the kind of sexual tension that makes for both interesting parties and international scandals. There’s just nothing like a jealous husband with a shotgun and bad aim to make a plot move along. Johnson easily ranks among the best contemporary humorists writing today. She doesn’t have to reach for the laughs — they come naturally from her observations. Le Mariage is a gem, and you’re invited.