Skip to content
Mass Market Paperback Madensky Square Book

ISBN: 0380714116

ISBN13: 9780380714117

Madensky Square

Select Format

Select Condition ThriftBooks Help Icon

Recommended

Format: Mass Market Paperback

Condition: Very Good

$33.89
Almost Gone, Only 1 Left!

Book Overview

A whip-smart observation of the passions and tragedies behind daily life, Eva Ibbotson's Madensky Square is a classic snapshot of Viennese life before WWI, with a new introduction from Laura Wood.... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

A very different eva Ibbotson, almost Maeve Binchy

Susanna starts a journal about her life - a modiste in Madensky Square, Vienna, 1911. However this is more than a journal this is about the people who also live in the quiet square, and about the changes in life which were in Europe pre world war one reflected through their lives. Susanna's life has been one of great happiness and sadness and slowly her story is revealed - from her early happy life at home, to her mother's death and the arrival of a strict Protestant aunt. Susanna escapes with a young corporal - she becomes pregnant to him, but he is transferred before she tells him. She is left to survive, an unwed mother. Her daughter is given up by for adoption by the nuns while she is ill, and her life is both changed by that moment for the better and for teh worse. For while she finds her destiny in becoming a dressmaker but also loses her daughter and spends years in her quest to find her. In the square also Lives Herr Egger (and his nasty little habit) the English lady who walks past erect each day, Sigi, the young piano maestro, and the Schumachers with their six daughters. In Susanna's world are Nini, who is an anarchist and a model for Susanna (there is no reason why an anarchist shouldn't dress well!), the countess Von Mertz a trouty old aristocrat with immensely good taste but no money and Field Marshall Gernot Von Lindenberg who has been Susanna's lover for 12 years. Susanna's journal records them all and their lives through the following 12 months, including the terrible moment when Herr Eggers orders teh demolition of Susanna's modest shop to make way for a new broad road. Great changes happen in the 12 months from when she starts to when she finishes her journal as each character's life is challenged. Susanna is central to each story and her own story - that of resolution with her daughter is also dealt with. This is a very unusual story - it is not a standard romance, or a standard happy ending. Yet in fact it has great contentment in its resolution.

I was expecting a different type of book...

Having heard this book described as a romance, that was what I was expecting. I think a better definition of this book would be a "love story", as considering a book a romance usually conjures up the narrow definition of what the romance genre is usually comprised of - two people who fall in love and get married (almost always), but especially, live happily ever after. Well, this story fits only one part of the definition - the h/h in this story are certainly in love, but will there be a happily ever after? So, this story sort of took me by surprise, but once I got over that, I did enjoy this book very much. Besides, there are plenty of other characters who do get their HEA, and even Susannah does get a sort-of HEA, so I guess it sort of fits into the romance genre. This is an excellent book, exceptional in every way. Eva Ibbotson has a way with words, and a way of describing her characters, that every scene, every person, comes vividly alive in your mind. I even found myself nodding or exclaiming aloud, I even started to argue out loud with a character - I really forgot that these were not real people!!! It's also bright and funny, and exceptionally easy reading. Although I tend not to enjoy books that are outside of the narrow definition of the romance genre, I found myself surprised at how much I really did enjoy this book. "Madensky Square" is set in Vienna in 1911, and as for time and place, it is an excellent choice. Susannah, the heroine of our story, is the proprietess of a dress shop, another excellent plot device as we get to hear about all the fashions pre-war, and all the woman who shop at this exclusive store, and all their human foibles - just delicious. This story is set just before the First World War which changed Europe forever, and we get to live in the beautiful and cultured Vienna for as long as we are reading this wonderful story, as Ms. Ibbotson brings that era and the sense of the time vividly alive to her readers. Every one of the characters she created are as real as real could be, and will remain in my head for a long time. There is Susannah herself, the narrator of the story, her assistant Nini who lives with her (don't ask me how that happened, Susannah says), and who is both a bloody revolutionary and a connoiser of fashion (and Ms. Ibbotson plays up that irony to the hilt), there is the child piano prodigy who plays across the square, there are simply so many funny and memorable characters... but my especial favorite is Edith Sultzer - you simply have to read this book - just for her story alone it is worth it. Most of this book is just full of little gossipy asides about all the people in it - just delicious! Eva Ibbotson's style reminds me slightly of Maeve Binchy, one of my favorite writers. Ms. Binchy writes about old Ireland, Ms. Ibbotson writes about old Vienna - but in many ways, there are a lot of similarities between the books - they both write about vivid, memorable characters, that live

The best romance novel I have ever read

Ibbotson creates truly wonderful characters---Susanna, the heroine of this novel, is the best of her creations. Susanna's romance isn't a perfect one (whose is?) and the story has rather sad moments but Ibbotson creates, as always, a world which any reader would want to visit. Her sly comments on political radicalism (in the form of Nini, the anarchist model/seamstress who works in Susanna's shop) are wonderful---too bad more earnest political writers never encountered Nini or thought more deeply about how difficult it can be to want "the revolution" while looking pretty... Everyone to whom I have lent the book has loved it and wants to buy a copy (I'm more than a bit worried that I may lend this book out and never get it back).

A slice of life

I found this to be a delightful read-a gentle,easy read and a fascinating microcosm of life in Vienna just prior to W.W.1.Our heroine owns a dress shop in a quaint city square,peopled by characters from various walks of life. It's not a book to strain anyones concentration as it flows along so pleasantly and is just what one could call"a nice little read".I don't mean that to sound patronising but it's a feel good read which I hope that others will enjoy.

A fun & entertaing read !

Set in pre-World War 1 Vienna, Madensky Square by Eva Ibbotson takes you into the world of Susanna Weber,a dress shop owner,as she begins her diary on the first day of spring 1911.Filled with a rich cast of secondary characters and sub-plots the pace never becomes dull.From her chief assistant(an anarchist)to the strange assembly of friends,customers & neighbors you become as involved in their world as if they were people you knew.A great weekend read.
Copyright © 2023 Thriftbooks.com Terms of Use | Privacy Policy | Do Not Sell/Share My Personal Information | Cookie Policy | Cookie Preferences | Accessibility Statement
ThriftBooks® and the ThriftBooks® logo are registered trademarks of Thrift Books Global, LLC
GoDaddy Verified and Secured