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Book Title

Versailles

Subtitle
A Novel
Author 1
Kathryn Davis
Body
Versailles tells the story of an expansive spirit locked in a pretty body and an impossible moment in history. As the novel begins, fourteen-year-old Marie Antoinette is traveling from Austria to France to meet her fiancé. He will become the sixteenth Louis to rule France, and Antoinette will be his queen—though neither shows a strong inclination toward power, politics, or the roles they have been summoned to play. Antoinette finds herself hemmed in by towering hairdos, the xenophobic suspicion of her subjects, the misogyny of her detractors, and the labyrinthine twists and turns of the palace she calls home.
 
At once witty, entertaining, and astonishingly wise, this widely acclaimed novel is an enchanting meditation on girlhood, womanhood, architecture, and—above all—time and the soul’s true journey within it. Shaken free of the dust of history and calcified myth, Antoinette is “very much alive here, and she’s magnificent” (Stacey D’Erasmo, The New York Times Book Review).

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List Price
$17.00
ISBN
ISBN
978-1-64445-098-7
Format
Format
Paperback
Publication Date
Publication Date
Subject
Subject
Pages
Pages
224
Trim Size
Trim Size
5.5 x 8.25
Keynote
Marie Antoinette “tells her own story” in this “sage, mercurial, and ravishing” novel (The New Yorker)

About the Author

Kathryn  Davis
Credit: Anne Davis
Kathryn Davis is the author of eight novels, including The Silk Road and Duplex, and Aurelia, Aurélia, a memoir. She is the senior fiction writer on the faculty of the writing program at Washington University.
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Praise

  • “Kathryn Davis is a master who doesn’t get her due. . . . She’s alive and writing brilliant books today. Read Versailles and spread the word. Kathryn Davis is a magician.”—Lauren Groff, Airmail
  • “With Versailles, Davis manages to render an entirely fresh characterization of a person who became a punchline. It is an absorbing meditation on how we spend the time we’re given, who we are at our core, and the forces of nature that we can and cannot control. It is a treasure to rediscover and an apt follow-up to Davis’s memoir.”?Kate Preziosi, The Brooklyn Rail
  • “Kathryn Davis brings a careful hand and a clear eye to this complicated subject to create a portrait of a life that has been shaken free from history’s daunting mythology.”?Michael Welch, Chicago Review of Books
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