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Loading... Van Rijn (2006)by Sarah Emily Miano
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. The price tag is usually indicative of the market appeal that any given book will command: generally, the more highly priced, the smaller and more specialised the reader base. Adequately written and interesting though Van Rijn may be, given the above criteria, I suspect it has priced itself below its _target market. Even for non art lovers or historians, this novel is an enticing journey into the past, well observed and researched, and providing a tour of the alternative artistic life of the 17th century.
Miano has set herself the formidable task of putting words, as it were, in Rembrandt's mouth. She is only intermittently successful. The journal sections contain a wealth of information about Rembrandt's methods, and embroider the known facts of his life without too much controversy. The disquisitions on art are carefully done; yet somehow the writing fails to convince.
A warmly acclaimed new novel from the brilliant author of the Encyclopaedia of SnowAmsterdam, 1667. Pieter Blaeu, a young publisher, meets the aged, destitute painter Rembrandt van Rijn, and is powerfully drawn into his orbit. Together with a poet named Clara he begins a pursuit of the elusive man's confidence, in a quest that is at once a love affair and a layered, luminous portrait of a most mysterious artist and his world. 'Here are the sights, smells, sounds and colours of the Dutch golden age alchemised into fictional gold . . . The marriage of art, history and fiction has rarely been so alive. A cause for celebration' The Times 'It is no mean feat for a young writer to pitch herself against the great master and attempt to achieve in prose the explorations of identity that Rembrandt achieved in paint . . . Van Rijn returns us to [the paintings] with a renewed sense of wonder' TLS 'An enticing journey into the past, well observed and researched, and providing a tour of the alternative artistic life of the seventeenth century' Sunday Times No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.6Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 2000-LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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A young publisher meets the ageing Rembrandt Van Rijn, and attempts to penetrate his inner circle. The novel wanders between timeframes, gradually uncovering the inner workings of our middle-class narrator, the varied people of his milieu, and, ultimately, the enigmatic artist himself. Parts of the novel are in relatively straightforward narrative; others are scattered diary entries from Rembrandt's unique mind; still others are excerpts from poems or thoughts of those on the fringes of the story.
Miano has expertly breathed life into her characters, to the point where the parables they tell and phrases they use struck me as straight from the history books, even as I began to realise that they were - for the most part - made up entirely. All of the characters are fascinating, but it is Rembrandt himself - tortured by age and loss, yet clinging on to his lustful, jovial youth, and always inspired by further aesthetic ambitions - who is most fully realised. As we view him from within and without, the icon becomes a man, yet remains suitably ambiguous nonetheless.
"Van Rijn" is an odd novel, stylistically unusual, and often academic in its discussion of the creation of art. Yet it works, because Miano conjures up an entire era, immersing us into the world of Rembrandt's Amsterdam, with the often tortured, yet always beautiful thoughts of the protagonists. Enchanting. ( )