3.5 

Embassy Wife

By Katie Crouch
Embassy Wife by Katie Crouch digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

"A smart, sparkling novel that is one part social satire, one part travelogue . . . Comical and cool.” Oprah Daily

In Katie Crouch's thrilling novel Embassy Wife, two women abroad search for the truth about their husbands—and their country.

Meet Persephone Wilder, a displaced genius posing as the wife of an American diplomat in Namibia. Persephone takes her job as a representative of her country seriously, coming up with an intricate set of rules to survive the problems she encounters: how to dress in hundred-degree weather without showing too much skin, how not to look drunk at embassy functions, and how to eat roasted oryx with grace. She also suspects her husband is not actually the ambassador’s legal counsel but a secret agent in the CIA. The consummate embassy wife, she takes the newest trailing spouse, Amanda Evans, under her wing.

Amanda arrives in Namibia mere weeks after giving up her Silicon Valley job so her husband, Mark, can have his family close by as he works on his Fulbright project. But once they’re settled in the sub-Saharan desert, Amanda sees clearly that Mark, who lived in Namibia two decades earlier, has other reasons for returning. Back in the safety of home, the marriage had seemed solid; in the glaring heat of the Kalahari, it feels tenuous. And the situation grows even more fraught when their daughter becomes involved in an international conflict and their own government won’t stand up for her.

How far will Amanda go to keep her family intact? How much corruption can Persephone ignore? And what, exactly, does it mean to be an American abroad when you’re not sure you understand your country anymore?

Propulsive and provocative, Embassy Wife asks what it means to be a human in this world, even as it helps us laugh in the face of our own absurd, seemingly impossible states of affairs.

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Embassy Wife Reviews

3.5
“I read this because it was our book club choice for the month and it’s the only reason I actually finished it. I found it boring, could not connect with the characters and the ending so rushed I had to go back to make sure I hadn’t missed something.”
“a little slow to get in to but the end was fun”
“Rejoicing and celebrating that I’m finally done with this book. Had I not been reading it for book club, I would have DNFed this 1/4 of the way through. The pacing is torturously slow for the first half and then somehow rushed in the back half. Every time a chapter gets interesting, the narrative switches to a mundane narrator. Every “plot twist” was predictable and the ending was unsatisfying. This book felt like it couldn’t decide what genre it wanted to fit into. However, to the author’s credit, it did make me want to learn more about Namibia which is a win. Also the men in this book deserve nothing less than GTMO”
“The pacing of this book really threw me off. It took almost to the half way point for the plot to start picking up, and the bulk of the action happened in the last 30% of the story. Honestly, if I hadn’t been reading it for book club I probably would have DNF’d it. The author spends so much time slowly building tension and drama between the characters, only for it to fall flat. I was really looking forward to seeing how the Amanda/Mila/Mark triangle and the Persephone/Adam situation would be approached. Only for there to be a time jump and a mention that the characters had confronted each other behind closed doors and are now moving right along. When the build up takes so long, this made the climax and end feel very unsatisfying. I did however really enjoy the author’s writing style. It was so witty and descriptive and kept me reading more than the plot at some points. I also love how the author wrote such different leading women. Oh also, Amanda should have beaten the s*** out of Mark.”

About Katie Crouch

Katie Crouch is the New York Times bestselling author of Girls in Trucks, Men and Dogs, and Abroad. She has also written essays for The New York Times, Glamour, The Guardian, Slate, Salon, and Tin House. A former resident of Namibia and San Francisco, Crouch now lives in Vermont with her family and teaches creative writing at Dartmouth College.

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