Reviews

The Last Painting of Sara De Vos by Dominic Smith

melvankomen's review against another edition

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5.0

This book really surprised me. I picked it up for a quick airplane read with the hope that it would be entertaining -- that's a pretty low expectation for me. What I found was a nuanced, richly detailed mystery with complex characters. The author did a masterful job in weaving together multiple timelines and fleshing out the humanity of his complicated main characters. I also enjoyed the settings -- such contrast between Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Dutch countryside, upstate New York.

melvankomen's review against another edition

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5.0

This book really surprised me. I picked it up for a quick airplane read with the hope that it would be entertaining -- that's a pretty low expectation for me. What I found was a nuanced, richly detailed mystery with complex characters. The author did a masterful job in weaving together multiple timelines and fleshing out the humanity of his complicated main characters. I also enjoyed the settings -- such contrast between Brooklyn, Manhattan, the Dutch countryside, upstate New York.

kellee's review

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emotional reflective medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.0

lass_pokebelle's review against another edition

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4.0

This is not a book I usually would have picked up, but I am so glad I did. I loved the different perspectives telling the whole story, moving backward and forward in time. The story was riveting to the last page. I felt I knew all of the characters intimately, especially Ellie, I could associate with her. Looking forward to Book Club to discuss this further

eowyns_helmet's review against another edition

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4.0

Lovely exploration of painting, life, forgery, loss. Beautifully written.

alundeberg's review against another edition

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3.0

I started out liking this book a lot and then not so much. First-- it has the settings I would like: 17th Century Netherlands, 1950's Manhattan, and present day Sydney. It's about little known 17th century Dutch women artists, and Vermeer is discussed a lot. It's about women's lack of recognition in the art world-- not just as artists, but as museum curators and restorers. It's about the nature of forgery and creation. So far everything's a win. Then a wealthy, older, white man finds out that his heirloom (one that he doesn't even like that much) has been stolen and forged and seeks payback from the young, vulnerable female college student who was manipulated by another unscrupulous man into creating forgery. Of course, what he takes from her in exchange is far greater than his painting and his pride. At that point I started skimming the rest of the book. I was frustrated by the author who put forth a rather feminist text only to fall back on the same old trope of man putting woman into place and basically getting away with it scot-free, but who also didn't want to acknowledge that this is what he did as an author. It's like he wants to be a feminist storyteller, but cannot punish the man for his wrong-doing.

debr's review against another edition

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5.0

This book, like its subject, is a masterpiece. The technique of tying together time periods by moving between past and present chapters is a highly used, and sometimes can feel overused, method, but in this book it is so beautifully and lovingly accomplished I can hardly think of a better example of this approach. Smith is an accomplished storyteller and gifted writer, and makes each of his major characters come to life completely as individuals. Such a great read.

michael5000's review

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4.0

2016 -- I think this is my favorite entry to date in the "modern middlebrow fiction set against a backdrop of Golden Age Dutch Master Art" genre.

2022 -- A surprising and mildly alarming aspect of my longstanding re-reading project is how little you sometimes remember about books you've read. Not only did I not recall the scenario and plot of this book, I didn't even remember its nature correctly. The upside is that, having misremembered it as tiresome fluff, I got the pleasant surprise of revisiting a good novel! And, although I began to recall the liniments once I got going, I wasn't able to anticipate events.

Now, it's possible that this will turn out to be the sad, sad little review where my memory loss issues were visible for the first time, but I don't think so. I think this is weirdly normal -- that everybody remembers less about books, even books that they quite like, than they think they do.

gilmoreguide's review against another edition

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4.0

It’s hard to believe that something as benign as an art exhibit entitled Women of the Dutch Golden Age could be the nexus for such widespread themes as art history, abandonment, love, grief, forgery, and intrigue, but in Dominic Smith’s new novel The Last Painting of Sara de Vos it is. Eleanor Shipley is an esteemed professor at Sydney University and a well-known scholar of seventeenth century female Dutch painters. She is also the curator of the exhibit, which will be displaying the only known painting by Sara de Vos, the first female member of the Guild of St. Luke—the only way an artist could paint for a living in Holland in the 1600s. Her painting, At the Edge of a Wood, has been owned by Martin de Groot’s family for three hundred years and hung in his bedroom until it was stolen and replaced with a forgery in the 1958. Within a year it was returned and now, over 40 years later both versions have shown up for the exhibit.

The rest of this review can be read at The Gilmore Guide to Books: http://gilmoreguidetobooks.com/2016/04/last-painting-sara-de-vos-novel/

madisoff's review

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slow-paced

2.5