Home :: Books :: Literature & Fiction  

Arts & Photography
Audio CDs
Audiocassettes
Biographies & Memoirs
Business & Investing
Children's Books
Christianity
Comics & Graphic Novels
Computers & Internet
Cooking, Food & Wine
Entertainment
Gay & Lesbian
Health, Mind & Body
History
Home & Garden
Horror
Literature & Fiction

Mystery & Thrillers
Nonfiction
Outdoors & Nature
Parenting & Families
Professional & Technical
Reference
Religion & Spirituality
Romance
Science
Science Fiction & Fantasy
Sports
Teens
Travel
Women's Fiction
Girl with a Pearl Earring

Girl with a Pearl Earring

List Price: $14.00
Your Price: $11.20
Product Info Reviews

<< 1 .. 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 .. 66 >>

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Inspiring
Review: I first came across the book as I was cleaning someone's office at work. Later I saw the book at the airport and bought it. As a person who has great love for books, I have never read a book completely through. While I was reading this book, I saw pictures of her in Chicago while visiting and finally even bought the poster. As an artist myself, it gave me the perspective of how others find your work so intriguing. The language is beautifully written and almost sings its own tune. Through poverty and tragedy the young lady finds herself in the home of Vermeer as a maid. Simply a page turner.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: Mediocre story
Review: I thought the story was too simple and it failed to transport me to Old Delft as I had expected. Besides the Meat Market, the Beast Market and doing laundry by hand, I didn't see anything remarkable about the Delft that the author created. It might as well have been any rich household in any country outside of the US. I've never been to Holland and I could have made up the same details. The story itself was too simple: a maid gets painted by Vermeer and his wife doesn't like it. First of all, I personally find it unlikely that Vermeer needed a maid to clean his studio every day. I found the drama in the story to be oversized, simple things are made into a big deal. Everytime Griet cries or feels an injustice done to her, I just didn't see what the big deal was. Since the story is done in Griet's voice, you don't get to know the other characters as well and you know almost nothing of Vermeer. Throughout the book, he's simply known as "he". I think it was an unwise decision to write the book in Griet's voice especially because we keep hearing how she's smarter than she lets on and how she's so wise she can see through people's words. It would have been more effective and believable if the compliments were coming from an observer rather than herself. It made her story less believable in a sense by writing it in first person.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: This is one of my favorite this year!
Review: I couldn't stop reading this book! Everywhere I went I had to read a chapter.. I stayed up a few long nights to finish it during finals. I loved the art and the historical fiction surrounding another Vermeer. This is a very cleverly written book I will read again and again!

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great Summer reading
Review: I read this book during a road trip. It was enjoyable reading for a summer vaction.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: Great story and quick reading
Review: This book has likable characters and an interesting plot that keeps you intrigued until the end. The reading is very quick and entertaining. Perfect for a hot summer day.

Rating: 2 stars
Summary: unimpressed
Review: I was so excited to read this book--every time I saw it in the book store I thought..this is the next one! However, upon finishing the novel I am left with a sense of longing for a deeper, more richly worded novel, and a plot that does not leave one hanging on for more. The plot is too simple and ends with little to no resolution. Griet realizes very little about herself, and we are left not liking or especially disliking Vermeer. One would like to cultivate a reader's relationship with him as well. I wanted much more in this novel.

Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Look Behind the Canvas
Review: Rather than discussing the techniques of Vermeer this book portrayed what Dutch life was like during Vermeer's life. I found it an interesting and refreshing way to introduce the times and circumstances for that particular period, with a good description of how paint colors were mixed as well as some insight into how Vermeer may have actually worked when he was creating. All in all, a delight to read.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Chevalier suggest women's fate is in the hands of men.
Review: Girl with a Pearl Earring

This novel is reminiscent of the equally popular "Memoirs of a Geisha". The theme of both books is that beautiful women, especially of an earlier age, are not in control of their destiny with regards to men. Henry James said exactly that in "Portrait of a Lady".

In the case of "The Girl with the Pearl Earring", the maid Griet, her beauty attracts the interest of powerful men-in this case the painter Vermeer and his patron. Tracy Chevalier, the author, gives us clues that their interest is dangerous and could lead to tragedy. When a gentleman fondles a maid in 1665 the maid cannot offer much resistance owing to her low status in life. More likely than not, as with Fantine in "Les Miserables", it is the maiden who is cast into trouble.

The beauty of this novel, for a male reader like myself, is that is draws you into the perilous existence inhabited by young women. Prior to this I always thought young women like Griet were just glittering beauties sailing easily through life on their good looks. It's kind of like reading the diary of a teenage girl-highly guarded and something to which one would not normally be privvy.

This novel is erotic too, but in a 17th century demure sort of way. Griet, we learn, is loath to let her full head of hair be seen by any man and she would never been seen with her lips held open. When she is intruded upon with her long mane of hair freely unfurled the reader's heart flutters and it must have for the young girl. And when she moistens her lips and holds them open at the request of the portrait painter Vermeer we are absolutely aghast and tingling with erotic excitement.

The other theme of this novel is the brutality of being poor and female in earlier ages. This is much like "Memoirs of a Geisha" where the two sisters are pushed into the business of entertaining men by their impoverished family. Griet is pushed into working as a maid because her family is poor as well. The women who work as maids of geishas have a brutal pecking order and are quite cruel to one another. An unattractive woman in the Geisha household is call "Pumpkin" because that is the shape of her head. Griet undergoes similar cruelty by Vermeer's children and the other maids in the large house.

For me, the most thrilling parts of the novel are where the young maid Griet is allowed to go into Vermeer's studio. This creates much jealously in the Vermeer household--not even the painter's wife is allowed into the room where the master creates his masterpieces. This is what is meant by the book jacket blurb that she is "drawn into an artistic wakening". Griet learns the subtlety of light, how to grind various potions from the apotheracy into vivid blues and reds, and the way a painting is made. It is assembled not by drawing an initial outline as one would imagine. Rather layer upon layer of color blotches are laid down until the final form takes place.

Rating: 3 stars
Summary: A POTRAIT OF A SELFISH MAN
Review: The style of writing itself is excellent, don't get me wrong, it's just that I found the artist Vermeer's depiction totally unsympathetic, his wife a crass, much put-upoun harridan, and the girl Griet although supposedly quite clever, in the end a simpleton about the way of the world in which she lived. This book does absolutely nothing good for the artist Vermeer's charachter, portraying him as weak, vain, and insensitive, especially towards his wife, who although a bit silly, in my opinion deserved much better than what was handed out to her.....reading books like these always leave me with a sense of injustice, and quite frankly, for that I can just pick up a newspaper.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: a wonderful read!
Review: This book was one I kept contemplating reading for several weeks. I finally picked it up and am I glad I did! As an art lover, it gives you an inside look on the tecnique of making paints and who sat for artists in those days. But even if you dont enjoy art, its a fabulous and exciting story. Grete is full of gumption...rare for a maid in those days. As a reader, you can only love her. Its good till the very last page! One of my top 5 reads.


<< 1 .. 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 .. 66 >>

© 2004, ReviewFocus or its affiliates