From Publishers Weekly:
Johnson's novels are always diverting, and this one has an especially provocative premise: its protagonist, Dinah, emerges from the subway at Bloomingdale's with a full-blown case of amnesia. Despite her confusion and vulnerability, Dinah has some enviable traits. Innocent and guileless, she does not carry the common human baggage of guilt and resentment against parents, siblings and spouses. With tart irony, Johnson contrasts Dinah's naivete with the neurotic behavior of the trendy New Yorkers she comes in contact with, including male chauvinist and famous surgeon Willard Wakefield, who marries her because she is "a clean slate . . . and grateful. The only grateful woman in town!" Dinah becomes a model wife and stepmother to Willy's two children, and soon has a child of her own. But as facts about her former life begin to emerge, each resurfacing memory robs Dinah of inner peace and further stresses her relationship with Willy, who himself is reacting badly to the tensions of his demanding career and his need to keep Dinah under his thumb. Meanwhile, Dinah is convinced by her Haitian maid, Emereldastet , that she is possessed by loas, or spirits. The introduction of voodoo into the plot and a mounting disregard of credibility veer the novel off track. In trying to convey her message that Dinah's redemption comes through acknowledgement of the mystical element in the world, Johnson disengages the reader's identification with her heretofore appealing heroine.
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Library Journal:
One day in the late Sixties, a young woman suffering from amnesia arrives in New York City, bruised and dirty, her only identification a charm bracelet reading "Dinah." After several uncertain beginnings, Dinah marries a prominent surgeon and settles into domestic life, never regaining more than pieces of her memory at a time. A complex sequence of events gradually restores Dinah's memory, throwing many lives into emotional turmoil. Johnson ( The World of Henry Orient, Tender Offer ) has written a rich, engrossing novel that is at once an amusing social commentary and a thought-provoking look at how our past actions influence and sometimes overshadow the present. Lonnie Beene, West Texas State Univ. Lib., Canyon
Copyright 1988 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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