Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0375423281, Hardcover)
“Jane Austen is alive,” proclaimed
The Christian Science Monitor upon the publication of Nancy Clark’s first novel,
The Hills at Home, about a beleaguered WASP family. “Complex and extraordinary . . . The book succeeds brilliantly,”
The New York Times Book Review announced. Clark’s new novel, a tale of Americans in and out of love abroad, confirms her dazzling storytelling gifts, taking up the adventures of a vexed and charming branch of the beloved Hill clan.
It is the summer of 1992, and the Lowes are living in a castle in Prague. While Alden manages a staff at the Czech Ministry of Finance and his increasingly disaffected wife, Becky, advises local woman entrepreneurs, their precocious daughter, Julie, is busy not learning Czech at Prague’s International Youth school–intent, instead, on pursuing her father’s right-hand man. This already precarious family life is suddenly upended when Becky flees south to Gaddafi’s Libya; there, at long last, she reunites with her mysterious William, the man who held her heart even as she married Alden twenty-one years ago.
Clark delights us not only with an unexpected middle-aged romance, but also with a dazzling canvas of place and history. She illustrates, from the crooked streets of Prague to the harsh Libyan desert, the myriad ways in which history–both global and personal––can shape our lives. How can the love-struck couple in Libya cope with the social implications of Becky’s flight? What happens to the doting husband and venturesome daughter in the mother’s sudden absence? Clark’s captivating answer is a witty, exuberant comedy about the waywardness of devotion and the elusive meaning of home.
(retrieved from Amazon Fri, 24 Apr 2009 07:58:16 -0400)
It is 1990 when the story begins and Alden, Becky & Little Becky are winging their way to Prague where Alden Will be working for some international agency helping Czechoslovakia to transition from their old communist economy to one of free capitalism. Becky will be working for an agency that helps to empower women entrepreneurs. Sensing that this is a new beginning, Little Becky decides to start life in Prague with a clean slate and decides to change her name to Julie. Her parents, ever distracted by their own concerns, readily assent to this decision.
But life in Prague is not as idyllic as the Lowe's had originally hoped. Their castle residence is drafty, has a temperamental supply of electricity; the help ranges from indifferent to downright sinister; and there is that minor detail of Becky's former admirer William, now in exile in Libya for spying for Muammar Ghadafi, who keeps sending her plaintive missals full of his love and longing.
When Becky decamps to join William, we learn that life on the edge of the Libyan desert need not to be lacking in Western luxuries, and that while Alden is momentarily devastated by the loss of his wife, his daughter Julie takes the opportunity to stretch her wings and fly off to new adventures. (