JoanK, Jonathon, and Barb St.Aubrey, I feel exactly as you are all feeling. I actually got bored with this book because I was so looking forward to learning more about Paris and the interactions of the Americans coming to Paris. Instead I felt bogged down with so many names that it became too confusing for me. Mc seemed to begin to enlighten us of some things going on in Paris at the time, yet falls back to the same people he seems to favor, which is John Singer Sargent, and Saint-Gaudens. Chapter 13 barely touches on Mary Cassatt, and then it goes on and on about Sargent.
I got the impression early on that only the wealthy Americans traveled to France to educate themselves, to promote their own interests and careers, and according to Mc they just did not seem to care to inconvenience themselves to learn the language, history or culture. I personally felt the rich and spoiled are who Mc writes about.
He lost me early on, and as much as I tried to stay with the book, it just couldn't hold my interest. I feel I learned more about Paris when we read
"I Always Loved You" rather than this book. With
"I Always Loved You, I felt like I was living among the artists, I could be a part of their lives, including the Parisians, the cafes, the museums, the apartments they lived in, and the surroundings outside their studios, I felt like I was sitting and walking among the Parisians in the Tuileries Gardens.
Barb St.A.,
"Sterile"
is a good description of the feeling of Mc's writing.
Johnathan,
"In this book Paris serves as the wallpaper."
Imagine Paris being a wallpaper, when it's one of the most beautiful, shining cities in the world. There is a saying that comes to my mind when I read your statement
Jonathan, it comes from the movie
"Dirty Dancing" with Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey. It is one of the most famous lines of the silver screen but actor Patrick Swayze, who played the handsome dance instructor Johnny Castle in the cult romance
'Dirty Dancing, hated saying
'Nobody puts Baby in a corner'. I say, "Nobody puts Paris as a wallpaper."
Do we know what the next book discussion will be, and when it will begin?
Ciao for now~