The lady in gold

the extraordinary tale of Gustav Klimt's masterpiece, Portrait of Adele Bloch-Bauer

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Anne Marie O'Connor: The lady in gold (2012, Knopf)

English language

Published Nov. 19, 2012 by Knopf.

ISBN:
978-0-307-26564-7
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2 stars (2 reviews)

1 edition

Review of 'The lady in gold' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

I'm unsatisfied, and I feel like the book title and premise misrepresented what it ended up being about. The beginning was promising, and I really enjoyed the picture the author painted (heh heh) of pre-war Vienna and the sorts of people it attracted. The depictions of Adele, Klimt, and all their associated friends and flings were interesting. From there, though, the book rushed its way to World War II and then spun its wheels there while it tried to tell short little stories of anyone who had even a tenuous connection to the painting or Adele or Klimt, and their experiences with World War II. It felt like half the book was stuck here, and I ended up getting really fatigued at reading Nazi story after Nazi story. It also felt like the painting, what I thought was the subject of the book, was mentioned very little during this section. …

Review of 'The lady in gold' on 'Goodreads'

2 stars

The book was very well researched. You could tell, because the author managed to stuff every single fact she had learned into it. At the expense of the book's organization, making it difficult to keep track of all of the different people. I also had problems with the discord between the horrific events described and the very simple declarative sentences used to describe them. The holocaust and its aftermath, told on a grade school level. But I did learn things, so I'd say that it was a worth-while read.

Subjects

  • Portraits