First completed read of 2024 but one that I've had to be read for awhile. Published in 2021, this paperback novel spans 461 pages and has interesting acknowledgements and an explanation of her research, etc. by the author. I have read others by Laura Morelli but this one was not my favorite, still it was a decent read., It switches among three main characters set in two time periods. It opens with Leonardo Da Vinci and follows him through Italy in the 1470's and expands to the second character, Bellina a servant in the 1490's in Florence. Bellina will interact with da ?Vinci who is commissioned to paint the portrait of her mistress, Lisa Ghiardini. The rule of the Medici and their rise, fail and restoration affect much of these two characters. The third character in a more modern era is Anne, a typist employee of the Louvre in Paris and her adventure with the rest of the staff s preserving the many artworks including the Mona Lisa from the invasion of the Nazis in World War II.
Page 5-6 Leonardo is working for and finishing a painting for his master but wants to o more. He is deciding to leave, and thinks" in the end we are all hiding something."
Pg 169,Leonardo again, " As much as I hate to admit it there is something comforting about returning to these old familiar places. After months away from Florence it fels like home. Perhaps it is when we might lose it all that we finally gain an appreciation for things we once took for granted."
Laura Morelli does intense thoughtful research to produce her historical novels. Her Ph.D in art history from Yale gives her a depth that would be missing if she were just a writer of fiction. There is some very good descriptive writing on pages 265-266 1942 as the Germans approached Paris and France. "The news had come to them the way it always did: Pierre sharing information from the wireless. This time he was pale with shock, his usual smile beneath a scowl now wiped away. The Germans had invaded the Free Zone at last. After the Allies landed in North Africa and started pushing back Italian forces, the Free French--courageous citizens who refused to bow either to Nazi Germany or Viiichy, France." The resistance will ultimately become a part of Anne's adventure, changing her life forever.
I found this reference to books by the author in her acknowledgements interesting. She had written this novel during the pandemic and could not travel to Paris or Italy instead writing at home. So she acknowledges the importance of books to transport us on journeys that we might otherwise not know.
Back Cover |
I found her pages of reflections About The Stolen Lady interesting. And she included an excerpt from the memoir of Lucie Mauzaric who was an archivist with the Louvre who is reference in the novel. This is one example of how well she expands to create fiction from real events.
The back cover summarizes the novel. I give this one only between 4 and 5 stars, Maybe I was just not into the right mood to switch amongst the characters back and forth over centuries.
The writing is good but the book didn't resonate with me. The research is fascinating and the inclusion of the information in the back is also interesting./
No comments:
Post a Comment