When I flipped through the book at the library the cover told me this was the story of beautiful dark eyed princess who has shrugged off her royal duties and taken up the life of theatre and how she meets and falls in love with a handsome and rich English businessman. For me atleast the story isn't so much about romance really. Atleast, not one of those heady romances where every other page is filled with detailed descriptions of the heroine's face. No, this was less of romance and more of, well more of, I can't say what exactly. It's a lot of everything to be sure.
Putzerl, or rather, Princess Theresa belongs to a more progressive branch of royalty. She is a staunch republican at heart and after the war she is one of those who fiercely support the end of royalty. She believes that art is the path to equality and music, something much bigger than all of us, is what will show the world that all of us are equal and royal titles don't matter at all. She is dedicated to art and so, informing her aunts, she sets off to Vienna where she takes up the job of a stage hand at the International Opera Company to serve the art she so believes in.
When Guy, a successful English businessman, simultaneously buys Putzerl's castle and then hires the opera company to perform in it Putzerl's two worlds meet.
But really, that's not the main bit of the story. As I said before, it's not about one particular thing or the other. It has a lot of stuff going on. It's about the peculiarities of royalty, the ridiculous snobbery and almost childlike obsession of the royalty to stick together and not give into being common. The royals aren't a bad lot really. Honestly from Eva Ibbotson's writing they seem this childlike group of terribly old Prince and Princesses secure in their absolute belief that Royalty will survive and their infantlike joy and interest in each other's family trees and lineage.
It's about Vienna, the wonderful city which lives and breathes music with names like Beethoven and Mozart associated with it. Ibbotson's story describes the city, it's splendour, it's streets, people, sites and history in every page, dropping off nuggets of information about the history and royalty in every paragraph and dialogue till unknowingly you learn as much (and sometimes more)about the city itself as you do about the characters. Vienna isn't just the setting of the story, it seems to be a living breathing character and perhaps the most important of them all. In every single paragraph there's an interesting little tidbit about the making of a famous building, or the marriage of some king, or what a famous artist did said or composed while in the city. All of it makes you want to put down the book and grab the first tickets to Austria that very moment.
It's about art. The one other thing that seems to be as important a factor as the city and it's royalty in this book is music and the opera. There are pages and pages on the antics that go on backstage at the theatre, the superstitions of the performers, their dreams and hopes, their fears and failures and eccentricites, the bailiffs, the pressure of performance, the rush to grab the audiences attention, the scarcity of money...the list goes on. The opera and it's inhabitants once again form a tidy little group of childlike adults, each more eccentric than the last and as a whole a not entirely unadorable little troup.
And then, only then, is it about any romance at all. But I loved the story. Every single last bit of it. Eva Ibbotson is one of those authors who leave you begging for more and I highly recommend anyone and everyone with an interest in art, music, history or theatre to pick up the book.