Sunday, 6 November 2011

Sunday Sensation #5

Mirror Image - Danielle Steel

Goodreads Synopsis
To look at one was to see the other. For family, even the girls' own father, it was a constant guessing game. For strangers, the surprise was overwhelming. And for the twins Olivia and Victoria Henderson, two remarkable young women coming of age at the turn of the century, their bond was mysterious, marvelous, and often playful—a secret realm only they inhabited.

Olivia and Victoria were the beloved daughters of a man who never fully recovered from his wife's death bearing them in 1893. Shy, serious Olivia, born eleven minutes before her sister, had taken over the role of mother in their lush New York estate, managing not only a household but her rebellious twin's flights of fancy. Free-spirited Victoria wanted to change the world. She embraced the women's suffrage movement and dreamed of sailing to war-torn Europe. Then, in the girls' twenty-first year, as the first world war escalated overseas, a fateful choice changed their lives forever.

It began when Victoria's life was about to become a public scandal. It led to a painful decision, and brought handsome lawyer Charles Dawson into the Henderson's life and family. Hand-picked by the twins' father to save his daughter's reputation, Charles was still mourning his wife's death aboard the Titanic, struggling to raise his nine year-old son alone, determined never to lose his heart again. Charles wanted to believe that, for the sake of his son, he could make an unwanted marriage work. But in an act of deception that only Olivia and Victoria could manage, the twins took an irrevocable step, which changed both their lives forever; and took one of the twins to the battlefields of France, the other into a marriage she longed for but could not have.

From Manhattan society to the trenches of war-ravaged France, Mirror Image moves elegantly and dramatically through a rich and troubled era. With startling insight, Danielle Steel explores women's choices: between home and adventure, between the love for family and the passion for a cause, between sacrifice and desire. But at the heart of Mirror Image is a fascinating, realistic portrait of identical twins, two vastly different sisters who lead their lives and follow their destinies against a vivid backdrop of a world at war.

Review
The story Danielle Steel captures within this novel is amazing, the love the twins have for each other are clearly the most powerful motive in the novel. Olivia is the more neglected twin I felt, the one who does things for others, other than herself. When Victoria marries Charles, the man Olivia is in love with, to save her reputation Olivia feels she must go away to France in the war. From this point on both sisters live separate lives and we see their lives move forward dramatically. When tragedy strikes there's only one thing to do.

A lot of reviews are saying the ending was terrible and insulted the characters. I would argue it's completely the opposite! What happens allows the characters to finally be happy and it is not an insult to Charles at all! Steel makes it quite clear that he knows exactly what's going on but doesn't stop it because it's what he wants. 

Victoria's character is a little annoying but I think it turns better when her 'character' shows her passion for the war and helping within its front lines. Victoria is a very modern character in the 1900's era which perhaps makes her character all the more enticing to the reader, her annoying part is her selfishness. 

I genuinely think this is one of the best Danielle Steel books that she has written. The way she incorporates history into the novel so flawlessly is amazing. I think the best of Steel's writing comes from her period works. 

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