Tuesday, May 18, 2021

 

Lily King: Writers & Lovers, Picador/UK, 9781529033137, paperback, 

(German edition: Writers &Lovers, C.H. Beck, hardback)




Excellent reviews for Lily King’s “Writers& Lovers” caught my eye after it was also recommended by several people whose judgement I trust... Although I am hardly the target reader for this novel age wise, I  enjoyed this uplifting, funny, warm story immensely, the right novel at the right time.  

Thirtyish Casey Peabody always wanted to be a writer and is happy supporting herself working as a waitress while trying to finish her first novel which is taking far longer than expected. When her mother dies unexpectedly, she is overcome by grief and starts to question the validity of her life decisions: her drifting around, being incapable of finishing her book, the breakup of a love affair, living in something close to a garden shack or the mountain of debt piled up from her master’s degree.  Life is yet to become less complicated when she is drawn to fellow writer Silas and almost at the same time meets Oscar, a widower and professor in his forties with two small boys that capture her heart.  

"Writers and Lovers"  has a lighthearted seriousness to it, if that makes sense,  which really struck a chord with me. A perfect summer read.

Tuesday, May 11, 2021

 

Mary Gabriel: Ninth Street Women: Lee Krasner, Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Joan Mitchell and Helen Frankenthaler: Five Painters and the Movement That Changed Modern Art, 9780316226189, Little Brown, Hardback
 

If one book held me captured and sustained me intellectually from December 2020 until yesterday, it has been Mary Gabriel’s incredible, masterful and painstakingly researched biography about five of the most instrumental women painters in Modern American art who were key figures of the New York School and Abstract Expressionism:  Lee Krasner, Elaine de Kooning, Grace Hartigan, Helen Frankenthaler and Joan Mitchell.  Admittedly this is not a book for everyone but for interested readers Gabriel’s chronicle of the life paths of these five pioneering, trailblazing women was an absolutely inspiring, fascinating read. 

The vast amount of information Gabriel brought together goes far beyond the art scene and looks at the political and socially turbulent happenings in New York, the US and Europe from the 1920ties until the Sixties.  Mary Gabriel spent 7 years researching and writing “Ninth Street Women”; I am completely blown away by her meticulous research, how her writing makes this book so easy to read despite the mountains of detail and complex web of people to follow.  I literally lived with the artists during my reading hours; she makes this book come to life so much, no highbrow art language here.

An epilogue follows their lives beyond the sixties until death:  five women who changed modern American art, suffering rejection, being ridiculed, often going hungry, who were ignored by galleries and museums for being daring and female, who all had very turbulent personal lives but continued to dedicate their lives to their art until the end.  Three were married to famous male painters which did not make their lives less complicated:  Lee Krasner to Jackson Pollock, Elaine to William deKooning and Helen, after her she was already well established in the art world, to Bob Motherwell.

This is a book not only for those interest in modern art but it is especially a brilliant biography of five unusual women who led very exceptional lives as painters.  5 stars from me, fascinating 730 pages to enjoy!