21 of 23 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
The WELL Painted Kiss!, March 29, 2005
This review is from: The Painted Kiss: A Novel (Hardcover)
I was fortunate enough to grab an advanced reader's copy of this novel off the reviewer desk of the magazine where I work. With historical fiction all the rage these days, it's possible to find writers who really know their craft, or conversely historians who really know the age they're describing, but seldom do we find both traits in the same author! Elizabeth Hickey both writes with a rare lyrical clarity and evokes turn of the century Vienna with such precision it makes one wonder if she had access to a time machine. I feel as though I've actually sat in the corner of Klimt's studio while he painted "The Kiss" and pinned hems in the Vienna fashion salon of his lover Emilie Floge.
I imagine that comparisons will be made between "The Painted Kiss" and "Girl with a Pearl Earring." While I'm positive that fans of Tracy Chevalier will love this book, it seems important to point out that Hickey's work is far from derivative. She is an exceptionally talented writer in her own right, and should be treated as such!
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14 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
look out Hollywood, here comes Elizabeth Hickey, October 18, 2005
This review is from: The Painted Kiss: A Novel (Hardcover)
The author's debut novel is not a project for the weak of heart. Historic fiction requires research - and lots of it, especially with characters who are somewhat contemporaneous with some people still living today. When I received this book from the author, I wasn't sure what to expect. This really isn't my favorite genre of reading, but from the first page, I was hooked.
Hickey has a true gift for crafting scenes and emotion so richly, that after reading, I felt like I had seen a movie rather than having read a book.
The novel explores an imagined romance between clothing designer Emilie Flöge and famed painter Gustav Klimt. The author weaves in several characters who were well known in the same era and whether or not all the relationships cited took place, they were definitely plausible.
The story moves from the "present" in late World War II where Flöge and her niece Helene are taking refuge in the country side away from the bombs hitting their beloved Vienna, to the"past" in the late 1800s when Flöge is a first a drawing student of Klimt, and later his occasional lover and his continual confidant and lifelong friend.
Written in the first person by Flöge, this is not simply a "chick" book - it's an interesting who's who of the art world in Paris and Vienna before, during and after World War I and gives a fascinating insight into the dramas surrounding art commissions and the subculture and power plays of the artists of the time.
While reading this novel, I felt like a time traveller with the details included - I could visualize the food, the utensils, the facial expressions, the clothing, the cold winter air - everything. I quickly felt like I knew these characters as well as Flöge knew them and found myself laughing out loud in a few passages.
Were Klimt and Flöge really lovers? Only they know for sure and they took their secrets to the grave - but Hickey takes these loose threads and ties them together into a plausible and enjoyable page-turner of a novel. This book is ripe for a movie deal. It is so well written, adapting it for film would not be a Herculean effort. I look forward to reading Hickey's next book.
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12 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A love affair with art and history as the backdrop, April 12, 2005
This review is from: The Painted Kiss: A Novel (Hardcover)
A Painted Kiss gives you insight on the life of the artist Gustav Klimt through his lover's eyes, Emilie Floge. She first meets the Gustav as a 12 year-old girl. Her parents asked him to give their youngest daughter drawing lessons. Emilie has many emotions running through her mind as a young woman. Her fascination for Gustav does not change and in fact grows into an impassioned love for him. The art world is developing and changing before their eyes. Chapters alternate between a narrative on the people and their poses in each of Klimt's well known paintings; 1890 when Emilie was a young woman in love, as a model and mistress for Gustav Klimt; Emilie as an older woman in 1944 during World War II. Against the backdrop of history, you see how Emilie influenced the art and genius of Gustav Klimt. Outstanding and enjoyable read.
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