From Publishers Weekly
Starred Review. Epstein's sweeping debut novel, set in early 20th-century China, fictionalizes the life of Chinese painter Pan Yuliang. Born Xiuquing, she is orphaned at a young age and later sold into prostitution by her uncle, who needs the money to support his opium habit. Renamed Yuliang, she becomes the brothel's top girl and soon snags the attention of customs inspector Pan Zanhua, who makes her his concubine. Zanhua sets her up in Shanghai, where she enrolls in the Shanghai Art Academy and early on struggles with life study, unable to separate the nude's monetary value from its value in the currency of beauty. She eventually succeeds, winning a scholarship to study in Europe. But when she returns to China, itself inching toward revolution, the conservative establishment is critical of Yuliang, balking as she adopts Western-style dress and becomes known for her nudes (one newspaper deems her work pornography). Simmering resentments hit a flashpoint at a disastrous Shanghai retrospective exhibit, and the fallout nearly destroys Yuliang's artistic ambition. Convincing historic detail is woven throughout and nicely captures the plight of women in the era. Epstein's take on Yuliang's life is captivating to the last line.
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Review
A historical novel on a grand scale...reads like a fable, a dark love story, a triumphant tale of survival. --
Maureen Howard, author of The Silver ScreenA luminous rendering of a woman whose work was her life. --
BooklistA phenomenal debut. --
Joanna Hershon, author of The German BrideA sparkling debut....Lush! --
VogueEpstein's harrowingand historically accuratedetails show that through darkness comes greatness. --
Marie ClaireEpstein's take on Yuliang's life is captivating to the last line. --
Publishers Weekly starred reviewLuminous.... An irresistable story. --
New York Times Book Review, Sarah Towers
Plush and vibrant...
The Painter from Shanghai combines the sweep of an epic with the persuasive, textured detail of daily life. --
Michelle Wildgen, author of You're Not YouYuliang's story is as captivating as it is chilling, vividly told, hard to put down. --
Helen Schulman, author of A Day at the BeachYuliang's story is by turns harrowing, passionate, and inspiring. A moving story, and a real page-turner too. -- Binnie Kirshenbaum, author of
An Almost Perfect Moment