A magically woven, richly detailed debut, Quattrocento tells an unforgettable tale of art, and love, and the unexpected places places where they meet.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Timeless Love,
By Alan A. Smith (Las Vegas, NV United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Quattrocento (Hardcover)
Quattrocento, the first novel by luthier James N. McKean, is a thoroughly engrossing love story about an art restorer who falls in love with the fifteenth century portrait of a beautiful woman. The story, which involves time travel to fifteenth century Italy, is filled with wonderful, accurate detail about art, and gorgeous descriptions of both past and present.McKean is clearly very knowledgeable about art and art history, and the details he provides about art and the process of creating art lend a realistic quality to the story. The book is first and foremost, however, a love story. While there is plenty of poetic and descriptive prose, yet the book moves at a fast pace and has a lot of action and suspense. Once I started reading this book I found I could not put it down, and finished it in two days. I recommend it to anyone who has a passion for art, romance, or who simply enjoys a good read.
8 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not Perfect, But ....,
By Cassandra_was_right "Diplomat-Writer-Mother-Cook" (Athens, Greece) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Quattrocento (Hardcover)
As previous reviews note, this is not a perfect book. It is, however, a clever and beautifully written one. The way that Matt - aware of the low-key, easily-overlooked disjunctures occurring around him, but not of their import - eases without intention into his travel through time, is unique and interesting. The smooth interweaving of a wonderful amount of information about music and painting is not only necessary to the story but fascinating, and goes down very easily: no stop-and-lecture points for our hero. And the writing itself asks gently but insistently for one's full attention.I am a high-speed devourer of books who is impatient with excess and who hates bad writing. Even with the best of books, I tend to skip lines or even paragraphs sometimes. But I might have actually read every word of this book; I did not want to miss any of the imagery and the grace of language. While reading, I was even consciously aware of doing something I do extremely rarely: slowing down deliberately in order to picture more clearly the images and ideas Mr. McKean was offering to me. And they were almost never disappointing. In the end, I find myself left with only two concerns: first, what happened to Orlando? and second, will Mr. McKean write again? If he does, I for one will be more than ready to sample his talents again.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Disappointed,
By
This review is from: Quattrocento (Hardcover)
McKean should stick to what he knows best: violinmaking! I picked the book up because the cover portrait of Leonardo's Ginerva caught my eye, having recently visited Florence and studied the quattrocento. I enjoyed the author's depiction of life on a Medici villa and the discussions about art. The time travel and the love story are both unsatisfying, however, and McKean never connects the dots at several points--there are major holes in plot development (unconnected to the time travel) that I found confusing and frustrating. At the same time, his descriptions are overwritten and overwrought. I got very tired of the leadups to the "wolf tone."
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