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Chargement... The Realist: A Novel of Berenice Abbottpar Sarah Coleman
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Cleveland, 1910: For a poor girl whose father has abandoned her, the prospect of becoming an artist is almost non-existent. But Bernice Abbott is resourceful and will happily challenge convention in order to succeed. Setting out to fulfill her dream, she embarks on a journey that will take her from bohemian Greenwich Village to the giddy caf s of 1920s Paris to a New York rising from the ashes of the Great Depression. On the way, illness and a tragic romance test her mettle, but a lucky coincidence leads her to the emerging art form of photography. Transforming herself from 'dull' Bernice to cosmopolitan Berenice, she sets the tone for life as a portrait photographer in the Paris of Hemingway and Picasso, and prepares to take on the men who are threatened by her vision and strength. Aucune description trouvée dans une bibliothèque |
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This book, though... I’m sorry to say that I found Sarah Coleman’s turgid writing too often bland and the storytelling is heavy-handed and simplistic. She tells the reader that Abbott was heroic, more often than showing her as heroic.
One of the clearest examples of Coleman's heavy-handed writing comes late in the book, early on in the section headed: New York & Ohio, 1951. Abbott is in the waiting room of a doctor's office with her partner Elizabeth McCausland and the reception calls McCausland's name.
"Instinctively, Berenice rises too, only to be frowned at. 'Just Miss McCausland, ma'am.'
" 'I'm her--' Berenice starts, then falters and sits down again. She can't say it, even now. The cowardice makes her feel like a traitor."
Almost 70 years ago, nearly twenty years before the 1969 Stonewall riots in Greenwich Village, there is literally NO word or phrase that Berenice could use to simply identify herself as a person with an unquestionable right to see the doctor with her partner without some ongoing relation with the doctor 's practice. Coleman's attempt to demonstrate this, is undercut by her unwillingness to just let it be a cruel fact of the times. Instead, with the description "She can't say it, even now," Coleman turns what could be a dramatic moment into simplistic, ahistorical gibberish. There are other historical gaffs. And Coleman's treatment of famous artists and other historical figures at crowded events is too often limited by her use of simple name checks and the most cliched character details.
Despite my overall dislike for The Realist, I've added an extra star to my rating because the book inspired me to look at Abbott’s photography again. ( )