Amazon.com Review
It is a perfect irony that the smart, luscious prose of
As Francesca describes a lurid, intense sexual affair that takes place not between two bodies, but between two sets of words; that is, between two online writers. By day, Elaine Botsch is a predictably accomplished woman poised for promotion at her soulless corporate workplace. At night though, when she logs on to the Internet as Francesca, she is exhilarated and degraded, verbally and sexually, by the mysterious Inez. It doesn't take Elaine/Francesca long to realize that her success at work is somehow related to her humiliation online. Elaine becomes frantic to discover who Inez really is. Although the mystery element of this novel--the unknown identity of Inez--is what makes
As Francesca so suspenseful, the questions this fiction asks about identity, about the place of sex in our lives, and about the connection between desire and fantasy, are important.
From Publishers Weekly
A whodunit with an edge, this debut novel, first serialized in the online magazine HotWired, is a mildly spicy one-night read. By day, narrator Elaine Botsch has it all together as she works hard to scale the corporate ladder. By night, using the handle "Francesca," she cedes all control to "Inez," her online dominatrix. These two sides of Elaine's nature coexist tidily: the more roughed up and degraded she is during her online trysts, the better she performs at the office. She's just about to clinch a promotion when a bonehead move (she forgets to use her alias when logging on) breaks down the barrier between her fantasy life and her professional one. Seizing on Elaine's gaffe, Inez hints that she knows Elaine off-screen, and the process of trying to detect Inez's real identity sends Elaine into a personal and professional tailspin. Unfortunately, the alienation of Internet sex (even zany S&M) and keyboard communication does infiltrate the book. Few of the characters become three-dimensional or interact convincingly. As Elaine sorts through the possibilities of who her dominatrix is, it's as if she's flipping through a Rolodex of stereotypes: the geeky librarian who might be a closet whipmaster; the control-freak boss who might secretly let loose. Only Elaine lifts off the page, and even her Dr. Jeckyl and Ms. Hyde dichotomy is reiterated rather than developed dramatically. But Baer's writing is taut, and her entertaining story comments intelligently?and with a light touch?on the nature of degradation. (Feb.) FYI: Baer is executive editor of HotWired and was formerly features editor at Wired magazine.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.