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When Anna decides to take an impromptu trip to Italy, she packs her bag, leaves her 6-year-old daughter, Lily, at home with close friends, and steps onto the plane. She's always been a woman of action, and her personal and professional lives have been filled to overflowing recently. So her friends Paul and Estella think nothing of the jaunt--it's a well-deserved break, a weekend for psychic refreshment, a brief step outside reality.
But a disappearance? When Anna fails to return, Paul and Estella make excuses, to themselves and to Lily. When the weekend stretches toward a week, the possibility of her permanent absence becomes hauntingly real. Dunant takes that absence and weaves together a pair of possible "explanations," playing out alternating scenarios of seduction (Anna in the throes of a disturbingly passionate, illicit affair) and abduction (Anna in the grasp of a stranger whose cordiality turns gradually to madness).
The narratives are both twinned and twinning, less separate alternative accounts than a dialogue, with moments, objects, and phrases that serve as uncanny mirrors between the two. Dunant is indeed a skilled mapmaker--her novel maps the edge of the self, its boundaries that so often go unquestioned. Anna's sojourn in Italy is an excavation of the threat of being defined by one's relationship to others and the temptation to redefine oneself beyond the restrictions of conventional expectation, no matter how seductive, how forceful, that convention. --Kelly Flynn --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
34 of 35 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Bedtime readers, beware -- but it's worth it.,
By P. A. Hogan (Providence RI USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Mapping the Edge: A Novel (Hardcover)
Anna Franklin's "strategy for revitalization" involves an impulsive trip to Florence, Italy where she expects to rendezvous with her recently acquired part-time lover. Anna goes missing, and back home in London, those closest to her -- Paul, loyal friend and surrogate father to Anna's daughter Lily, aged six, and Estella, her long-time best friend -- are becoming increasingly anxious, worried -- and puzzled. "Mapping the Edge" is both a suspense story and a study of relationships. As a suspense story, the author borrows a premise used so effectively in some of Hitchcock's films: The innocent caught in the web of the villain's machinations; the dupe ensnared by the duper. On another level, the book explores relationships: between women and men, women and women, men and men, adults and children, the victim and the victimizer. Author Dunant accomplishes all this by filling the reader's plate with a clever device: two scenarios of what might have happened to Anna. In this author's hands, it is done skillfully and entertainingly, and the resolutions are plausible. If you're a bedtime reader, expect a late night when the engaging mixture of a suspenseful plot and intriguing characters seduces you.
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Interesting premise not fully realized,
By B. McEwan "yellokat" (Brooklyn, NY USA) - See all my reviews (VINE VOICE) (TOP 1000 REVIEWER) (REAL NAME)
This review is from: Mapping the Edge: A Novel (Paperback)
This novel has a very interesting structure in which two parallel plots are presented as a way of explaining the sudden absence of a young mother. Anna leaves on a short trip for Italy without telling her best friend and without giving a full explanation to the surrogate father of her child -- a gay man who is busy juggling the pieces of his own life in a way that is similar to Anna. The one difference is that Anna does not have a current love relationship, which according to one of the plot strands is the reason she went to Italy.
When she doesn't return as scheduled, Anna's best friend and the child's father end up caring for the kid and trying to decide what could have happened to Anna and at what point they should notify the authorities. Here the plot bogs down a bit, as the father, the friend, the child and the father's lover have a lot of interchange that is presumably supposed to be highly meaningful, but which I found a bit tiresome. The portion of the book that moves along at a strong pace is the plot thread that posits a sinister reason for Anna's absence -- that she has been kidnapped by a serial killer who is searching for his great love. The suspense is very well developed in this section of the novel and comprises the primary reason that one would want to read this book. Many people seem to enjoy Sarah Dunant more than I do. While I like her choice of story topics, I find that once I'm into her book she loses me along way. This is the second of her novels I've read (the other being The Birth of Venus) in which I find her attempts at meaningful dialogue do not, as I assume is intended, reveal the complexities of her characters. Rather, the dialogue seems to further obscure her characters' motivations and feelings, and I wonder if that may not be her intention after all. In any case, Mapping the Edge is worth reading for its inventive structure, especially the artful way that Dunant creates interfaces between the two plot strands: both incorporate a souvenir horse sculpture that she is brining home to her daughter, for example. This will not be the best novel you'll read this year, but it is a cut above the usual fare.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
This edge is razor-sharp,
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This review is from: Mapping the Edge: A Novel (Paperback)
In "Mapping the Edge," Sarah Dunant's impressionistic thriller, Anna, a single mother with a seven-year-old daughter, takes a break from her life for a short trip to Italy on her own. When she does not return her friends, Estella and Paul--she the best friend, he a (gay) chum of Anna's--act as surrogate parents and rush to Anna's house to relieve the professional babysitter, who has to go home to her family, in caring for the daughter, Lily.In alternating chapters we are given two possible explanations for Anna's failure to return (titled "Away," these are told in the third person) after which there is a chapter called "home," a first-person narrative related by Estella. This pattern repeats itself for the duration of the journey. Although Ms. Dunant does not specifically say so, perhaps the more sinister version of Anna's fate (she is being held against her will by a stalker) is imagined by Estella while the more romantic one (she has meet a lover and has simply decided to spend one more weekend with him) is imagined by Paul. Regardless, the interwoven tales mesh smoothly, and the prose is lucidly clear. The characters are believable and somewhat sympathetic--even the stalker. It's a gripping read.
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