04-06-2008, 03:32 PM
I really enjoyed the Portrait of Mrs. Charbuque by Jeffrey Ford. It reminded me quite a bit of The Picture of Dorian Gray by Oscar Wilde, with a setting of old turn-of-the-century New York City as vivid as in Caleb Carr's The Alienist. Being unartistic to the extreme, I learned a lot about the artist's viewpoint and craft. I really enjoyed the mystery, which was highly original. You never know what to believe. The ending wasn't the best in the world, BUT the journey was worth it.
From School Library Journal....
In New York City at the turn of the 20th century, Piambo is a young artist earning his bread painting "corrective" portraits of plain society wives, beautifying them for the canvas and their husbands. He has a crisis of conscience when one woman, standing under her portrait, leans close and whispers, "I hope you die." As he restlessly wanders the streets that night, a blind man approaches, claiming to know him by his dishonest smell, and offers him the commission of a lifetime: paint a portrait of his employer and receive compensation so grand that he will never have to paint another wife. The catch? Piambo will not be permitted to see Mrs. Charbuque. She will sit behind a screen, and he may ask her questions; from the answers he is to divine her essence. If he captures her likeness, compensation will triple.
From School Library Journal....
In New York City at the turn of the 20th century, Piambo is a young artist earning his bread painting "corrective" portraits of plain society wives, beautifying them for the canvas and their husbands. He has a crisis of conscience when one woman, standing under her portrait, leans close and whispers, "I hope you die." As he restlessly wanders the streets that night, a blind man approaches, claiming to know him by his dishonest smell, and offers him the commission of a lifetime: paint a portrait of his employer and receive compensation so grand that he will never have to paint another wife. The catch? Piambo will not be permitted to see Mrs. Charbuque. She will sit behind a screen, and he may ask her questions; from the answers he is to divine her essence. If he captures her likeness, compensation will triple.