
Late and Soon
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی

Claire is a Sotheby's expert who has her sights on two paintings by a "first-rate second-tier artist." If she can put together an auction with these paintings, it will strengthen her position in the art world. Robert Hughes is an arts reporter for THE WALL STREET JOURNAL, and his insider's savvy offers listeners much satisfaction. Hughes narrates his debut novel, and, while his insights into the behind-the-scenes machinations of a grand auction house are fascinating, his reading falls short of the mark. With strong characters and a plot bursting with intrigue, sophistication, and romance, it's a shame that this multilayered story remains a one-dimensional listening experience. S.J.H. (c) AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine

August 29, 2005
A Sotheby's art specialist must arrange a career-making auction of 19th-century paintings, reconsider the loss of her marriage and negotiate the possibilities of new romance in Hughes's mannered, elegant debut. At an art opening one evening, Claire, 32, encounters Tobias, the man her ex-husband, Peter, left her for, and learns that that Peter has dumped Tobias, too. Claire can offer sympathy but not much attention: she has her own still-wounded heart to think about, and she's tied up in securing two paintings by James Tissot (a "first-rate second-tier artist") for her auction from Elizabeth Jane Driscoll, an octogenarian widow with undeserving heirs. To both women, the paintings bear the symbolic weight of memory and desire. Also in the picture is Peter's brother, Frank, a former priest who arrives in New York with a confused affection for Claire, and spunky Bernice Carton, who collects art by collecting husbands. Hughes, a Wall Street Journal
reporter who's covered the auction market, depicts the meeting of art and commerce with an insider's keen eye, and it is this part of the book that fascinates most. Claire's emotional twists and turns, rendered in ornamental prose attuned to the slightest shift in feeling or nuance, are less novel but nevertheless affecting in this credible tale of longing and hope.
دیدگاه کاربران