(11/5/2013)
Nancy Horan understands the irresistible charm of the independent woman and once again has captured the essence of a fascinating personality, a woman loved by a younger man, adored by her native Samoan neighbors, and scorned by Victorian contemporaries who hadn't the foresight to appreciate her Bohemian spirit.
Fanny Stevenson summarized her life as "a wild ride on the crest of a wave that rolls and never breaks." Her wild ride begins as she leaves her unfaithful husband and ferries her three children off to France with the intent of enriching their lives and hers through art. By the end of the first chapter, you know that she is a "woman who could run the world if she chose to" (as Louis Stevenson's uncle George describes her later in the novel). During her sojourn in Paris she meets Stevenson, a struggling sickly writer, eleven years her junior, and thus a remarkable love story begins. From France to the United States, Scotland, England, and the South Pacific, readers ride the crest of the wave that was Fanny and Louis Stevenson's loving, sometimes troubling relationship.
Under the Wide and Starry Sky will appeal to those who enjoyed Loving Frank and other recent biographical novels about remarkable women who lived under the shadow of famous men. Writers, I believe, will especially enjoy eavesdropping on the everyday routine of two artists, who strive to balance family needs with the demands of their literary lives.