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Girl Reading: A Novel [Deckle Edge] [Hardcover]

Katie Ward

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Book Description

Feb 7 2012
Seven portraits. Seven artists. Seven girls and women reading. 

A young orphan poses nervously for a Renaissance maestro in medieval Siena. An artist's servant girl in seventeenth-century Amsterdam snatches a moment away from her work to lose herself in tales of knights and battles. An eighteenth century female painter completes a portrait of a deceased poetess for her lover.  A Victorian medium poses with a book in one of the first photographic studios. A girl suffering her first heartbreak witnesses intellectual and sexual awakening during the Great War. A young woman reading in a bar catches the eye of a young man who takes her picture.  And in the not-so-distant future a woman navigates the rapidly developing cyber-reality that has radically altered the way people experience art and the way they live.

Each chapter of Katie Ward’s kaleidoscopic novel takes us into a perfectly imagined tale of how each portrait came to be, and as the connections accumulate, the narrative leads us into the present and beyond. In gorgeous prose Ward explores our points of connection, our relationship to art, the history of women, and the importance of reading.  This dazzlingly inventive novel that surprises and satisfies announces the career of a brilliant new writer.


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Product Details

  • Hardcover: 352 pages
  • Publisher: Scribner; Reprint edition (Feb 7 2012)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1451655908
  • ISBN-13: 978-1451655902
  • Product Dimensions: 21.8 x 15.4 x 2.1 cm
  • Shipping Weight: 522 g
  • Amazon Bestsellers Rank: #25,557 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

Product Description

Review

“A real wow of a first novel…incredibly clever.” The Times (London)

Book of the Week: "Katie Ward’s assured debut is inspired by that mysterious and provocative subject of a thousand visual images: a woman reading . . . In each chapter Ward twists a story around real works of art. Her seven unpredictable tales serve up a lively, irreverent and even feminist journey through history.

Time Out (London)



Book of the Week: "This isn’t a novel – it’s a time machine! Well, nearly. As each chapter transports you to a completely different century, you’ll find yourself wondering if Ward has her very own Tardis … I guarantee the stories will relate to your own life in some way – if you’re planning to pack any holiday books this year, make sure Girl Reading is one of them." Cosmopolitan (UK)

"Girl Reading is a debut of rare individuality and distinction. Katie Ward inhabits each of her seven scenes, her seven eras, with a fluent and intuitive touch, and sentence by sentence, deft and mercurial, she surpasses the readers’ expectations. What is set down on the page has a rich and allusive hinterland, so that the reader’s imagination has a space to work, and what is unsaid has its own fascination. The writing is full of light and shadow, alive with fresh and startling perceptions.” –Hilary Mantel, author of the Man Booker Prize winning Wolf Hall

"Ambitious in range and technically impressive...[Girl Reading] is undoubtedly the work of a writer to watch." --Kirkus

About the Author

Katie Ward was born in Somerset in 1979. She has worked in the public and voluntary sectors, including at a women’s refuge center, in the office of a Member of Parliament, and in various community-based projects. She lives in Suffolk, England, with her husband and two cats.

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Most Helpful Customer Reviews on Amazon.com (beta)
Amazon.com: 3.7 out of 5 stars  18 reviews
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars An imaginative tour de force Jun 9 2011
By V. Grand - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback
How to describe a book like Girl Reading? Comparisons have been drawn with Cloud Atlas, by David Mitchell, and I understand why. Several stories, all with one thing in common - they are based on a picture of a woman reading a book. Each story is complete in itself, and sufficiently compelling to draw you in.... you suspect there's a connection, you vaguely wonder what; then when you get to the end and find out what you have been reading... it is a truly unique and amazing story. I finished reading the book last night, and I now want to read the book again, in the knowledge of its ending. This book is original and captivating. Highly recommended!
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Girl Reading a Good Read Jun 16 2012
By KristineK - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Hardcover|Amazon Verified Purchase
Six out of the seven short stories were interesting even though the book itself wasn't what I expected at all. (I think I'm just not cut out for the short-story genre.) It was a good read as each story could be read at one sitting - and they were all very different from each other.

Girl Reading
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
4.0 out of 5 stars Richly textured portraits, impeccable prose Aug 1 2011
By Susan Anderson - Published on Amazon.com
Format:Paperback|Amazon Verified Purchase
Can't turn the page fast enough. In Girl Reading, a debut novel, Katie Ward paints seven portraits of girls reading--their lives, their conflicts, their passions, their griefs. The author's prose is rich, her syntax spare, exact, sometimes provocative, sometimes surprising, usually delightful. From the start we are caught up in the characters, the stories of the young women who read. We watch with them. We weep with them. We wonder, what comes next.

On its skeletal level, the work yolks together two disciplines--painting and writing. As a painter uses tempera, oil, camera, or video to paint a picture that tells a story, so this author uses words to create the same. Seven stories--each one evocative of a unique dilemma; and the characters, almost flesh and blood, reflect their age. Seven ages of the human race flow from and ping back to seven images. In the end, a synchronicity: the last section knitting together all parts into a whole, and, with a start, we discover the story at its heart, the unity of the work.

The reader comes to a deeper understanding of the early and late Renaissance, the Victorian era, the twentieth century, the present, and beyond. Themes include humanity's inability to see, to know the truth, given the social constructs and limitations which inhibit understanding. And the core image of a girl reading, in this context, is ironic.

The book is a must for all serious readers interested in history and the direction of literary fiction.

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