YA author Gardiner makes her adult fiction debut with a humdinger of a subject: Julie d'Aubigny (1673–1707), the sword-wielding, cross-dressing, bisexual opera star of 17th-century France. Raised in the stables of Louis XIV, d'Aubigny escapes poverty and abuse by attaching herself to a variety of lovers, from the King's Master of Horse to her fencing instructor to the daughter of a nobleman. She hurtles from one adventure to another until she lands in a convent at age 33, reflecting on her life to a priest who has come to give her final absolution. While Gardiner's historical research is impressive, the characterization of d'Aubigny as a consummate actor oddly keeps the reader at a distance. She successfully reinvented herself multiple times and was driven by passion, but the deathbed confessional device makes the telling of her story seem more performative than revealing.
VERDICT With her transgressive actions and devil-may-care attitude, d'Aubigny's life seems almost tailor-made for fans of historical fiction.
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