Short Stories, Irish literature, Classics, Modern Fiction, Contemporary Literary Fiction, The Japanese Novel, Post Colonial Asian Fiction, The Legacy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and quality Historical Novels are Among my Interests








Saturday, July 3, 2021

Loving Modigliani - The Afterlife of Jeanne Hébuterne - A novel by Linda Lappin - 2020


 



Website for Paris in July 2021- Hosted by Thyme for Tea





This is part of my participation in Paris in July, now in year ten.




Prior works I have read for Paris 

 in July 2021


1.  Lost in Paris by Elizabeth Hickey



Loving Modigliani - The Afterlife of Jeanne Hébuterne A novel by Linda Lappin - 2020





Website of Linda Lappin



Gateway to Linda Lappin on The Reading Life


My Q and A session with Linda Lappin


My post on The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci

 




I have been an avid reader of Linda Lappin ever since I read her award winning novel, Katherine's Wish, based on the last years of the life of Katherine Mansfield.  I have also read and greatly enjoyed her two other novels, both set in Tuscany, The Etruscan and Signatures in Stone, which is a finalist for the Daphne Du Maurier Award from Romance Writers of America, in the history category.


One great writer often leads you to another, but not always in the ways we might expect.  11  years ago I began reading and posting on all the then published short stories of Katherine Mansfield.   After completing the stories I discovered Linda Lappin had written a highly regarded novel centering on Katherine Mansfield's last year.  I read Katherine's Wish and felt Lappin had a profound understanding and sympathy for Mansfield as a writer and as a person.  I now see how this all ties in with Lappin's wonderful, The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the Genius Loci.  Mansfield (1888 to 1923) left her home country of New Zealand for London  in 1908 never to return.  In the stories of Mansfield you see a constant search for a home, a longing for a place of beauty.  I feel Mansfield was searching for a Sacred Place, for holy texts and holy men.  In her brief stories, such as the wonderful early works contained within In a German Pension, she is able to create a strong and deep sense of place.  The ability to do this is one of the lessons imparted in Lappin's workbook.




  I find a great depth of knowledge combined with a deeply intuitive 

sensibility in Lappin’s work that brings what she writes about to life with cinematic  verisimilitude.  Her prose has great elegance, her people are real, her history is right.  She is a master of atmosphere.  Her novels are  exciting and just flat out a lot of fun to read.  




Amedeo Modigliani (1884 to 1920) is now considered one of The greatest of early 20th century artists.  Lappin takes us deeply into the trubulent struggling Parisian artist.  Modigliani  was Italian but knew Paris was his artistic home.  Like many artists, he hired Young women to pose nude for him.

 






Jean Hébuterne (Born: 6 April 1898, Meaux, France

Died: 26 January 1920, Paris - )met him at age sixteen and quickly moved from model to lover then pupil. Modigliani had a reputation as a womanizer.  Jean’s parents were agast at their relatiionshio. As relationship progresses Germany and France are at war.  Jean’s beloved older brother joined the French army.  Through experiences of Jean, we meet other artists and I felt a close observer almost there in the Montparnasse district of Paris, then Center of the art scene in Paris. Jean to her families horror gets pregnant and has Modigliani’s daughter.

He promised marriage but never kept his word.

 




Jean falls to her death from a window in the apartment she shares with Modigliani at age 21.  Some said his philanderings led her to suicide, others felt it was an accident.  I do not want to give away very much of the marvelously original plot other than to say there are several different interconnected segments coming from her death.


We follow Jean after death as she wanders through Paris.  This was just too exquiste a trip for me to describe.  I loved her cat companion and spirit guide, also dead who helped Jean figure out where she now was.  She spends about 25 years in Paris.  It turns out their are all sorts of rules the dead must follow. She comes to see the impact of German rule on Jews in Paris.


We leave Jean for a while.  We take up with an American graduate student in Paris to Research Modigliani, fifty years have gone by. She ends up meeting fascinating people with connections to him.


Modigiliani’s paintings now bring millions of dollars.  She becomes involved with a search for a missing painting.  




There is also a delightful closing episode taking a still deceased Jean to the South Pacific.


Lappin has produced a masterpiece.  As I read I could not wait to see what marvel she would next offer me, what plot turns would be taken.  Her prose has a very painterly style, her descriptions of interiors of Parisian dwellings would stand up next to Balzac and Proust.  


I give this book my complete endorsement.  To aspiring writers I suggest you first digest Lappin’s The Soul of Place, A Creative Writing Workbook, Ideas and Exercises for Capturing the 

Genius Loci then read this novel to study how Lappin creates a sense of place.



Don Wallace, author of The French House, elegantly evokes the wonder of this book


Praise for Loving Modigliani What a story Linda Lappin has to tell in the short life and long legend of Amedeo Modigliani, compulsive seducer, dedicated decadent and artist whose vision, like El Greco’s, seemed to warp the very air. But it’s the verve and authority with which Lappin centers her story on the parallel life (and afterlife) of Jeanne Hébuterne, artist and Modigliani’s model and lover, that amplifies the achievement of this scintillating tale, which is also a love story, a ghost story and a treasure hunt through the decades for a lost masterpiece. Through Jeanne’s female gaze, the great tapestry of Paris and its fervid art scene is rendered with twice the depth of field and emotional color. The result is a novel of high originality, page-turning pace and a poetic precision so impeccably deployed that the book unfolds like a living, breathing, 3-D spectacle in the reader’s mind.”


From Lindalappin.net


LOVING MODIGLIANI

PARIS 1920 Dying just 48 hours after her  husband, Jeanne Hebuterne—wife and muse of the celebrated painter Amedeo Modigliani and an artist in her own right — haunts their shared studio, watching as her legacy is erased. Decades later, a young art history student travels across Europe to rescue Jeanne's work from obscurity. A ghost story, love story, and a search for a missing masterpiece.

 

Available from these sellers:

Amazon kindle https://www.amazon.com/Loving-Modigliani-Afterlife-Jeanne-Hébuterne-ebook/dp/B08MDCDC9V/

 

Amazon print: https://www.amazon.com/Loving-Modigliani-Afterlife-Jeanne-Hébuterne/dp/1947175300/ref=tmm_pap_swatch_0?_encoding=UTF8&qid=&sr=

 

Barnes and Noble https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/loving-modigliani-linda-lappin/1138481578?ean=9781947175471

 

APPLE https://books.apple.com/it/book/loving-modigliani/id1544995840

 

KOBO https://www.kobo.com/ww/en/ebook/loving-modigliani

 

LAFELTRINELLI https://www.lafeltrinelli.it/ebook/loving-modigliani/9781947175471

 


Linda Lappin is the prize-winning author of four novels: The Etruscan (Wynkin deWorde, 2004), Katherine’s Wish (Wordcraft, 2008), Signatures in Stone: A Bomarzo Mystery (Pleasureboat Studio, 2013), and Loving Modigliani: The Afterlife of Jeanne Hébuterne (Serving House Books, 2020). She won the Daphne Du Maurier Award from Romance Writers of America in 2014

.She is also the author of The Soul of Place: Ideas and Exercises for Conjuring the Genius Loci (Travelers Tales, 2015), which won a Nautilus Award in the category of creativity in 2015. A former Fulbright scholar to Italy, she has lived mainly in Rome for over thirty years. Her websiteis www.lindalappin.net.




This is a perfect book for any quarantined reader 


Mel u

The Reading Life 









4 comments:

Lisbeth said...

I love stories like this. It is strange that most stories about muses to big artists are mostly sad stories. Maybe the creative mind is appealing but not always good for you. I put this on my wish list.

Mel u said...

Lisbeth -greetings, Linda Lappin very much enjoyed your comment. She woyl like to give you an ARC if you are interested please contact me here on Linda via The contact information on her website

Lisbeth said...

Thank you for the e-mail. I have contacted Linda concerning her generous offer. I really look forward to reading the book. I am also looking into her other books whose titles are tickling my imaginations. 
All the best for 2021!

Jeanie said...

Modigliani is one of my all-time favorite artists and I'm really interested in this one and to read more about Jeanne. I've heard of this book before but somehow neglected to put it on my list. That's changed! And this is why I love Paris In July!