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Isadora /

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York : Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2017Edition: First editionDescription: viii, 386 pages ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 9780374279981
  • 0374279985
  • 9781250183095 (pbk)
  • 125018309X (pbk)
Subject(s): Genre/Form: DDC classification:
  • 813/.6 23
LOC classification:
  • PS3607.R387 I82 2017
Summary: Using the scaffolding of Isadora Duncan's life and the stuff of her spirit, Amelia Gray delivers an incredibly imaginative portrait of the artist In 1913, the restless world sat on the brink of unimaginable suffering. But for one woman, the darkness of a new era had already made itself at home. Isadora Duncan would come to be known as the mother of modern dance, but in the spring of 1913 she was a grieving mother, after a freak accident in Paris resulted in the drowning death of her two young children. The accident cracked Isadora's life in two: on one side, the brilliant young talent who captivated audiences the world over; on the other, a heartbroken mother spinning dangerously on the edge of sanity.
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Holdings
Item type Current library Home library Collection Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Standard Loan Coeur d'Alene Library Adult Fiction Coeur d'Alene Library Book GRAY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610020763798
Standard Loan Hayden Library Adult Fiction Hayden Library Book GRAY (Browse shelf(Opens below)) 1 Available 50610022310879
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

A 2017 NPR Great Read

Using the scaffolding of Isadora Duncan's life and the stuff of her spirit, Amelia Gray's breakout novel delivers an incredibly imaginative portrait of the artist, resulting in "a stunning meditation on art and grief by one of America's most exciting young authors" (NPR).

As dynamic, enthralling, and powerful as the visionary artist it captures, Amelia Gray's Isadora is a relentless and living portrayal of a woman who shattered convention, even in the darkest days of her life.

In 1913, Isadora Duncan was known as much for her stunning dance performances as for her eccentric and salacious personal life -- her lovers included poets, directors, and the heir to the Singer sewing machine fortune. But when her two children drowned in Paris, she found herself taking on a role she had never dreamed of.

The tragedy brought the gossips out in full force, and the grieving mother wanted nothing more than to escape it all. Fleeing the very life she had worked so hard to build, she left her sister, Elizabeth, holding the reins of the artistic empire along with Elizabeth's lover, Max, who had his own ideas for greatness. For two years Isadora cast about prewar Europe, living on credit on islands in Greece and in shuttered beachfront dwellings in Italy. She lashed out at her dearest lovers and friends, the very people who held her up. But life had cracked her spirit in two: on one side, the brilliant young talent who captivated audiences the world over; on the other, a heartbroken mother spinning dangerously on the edge of sanity.

Using the scaffolding of Isadora Duncan's life and the stuff of her spirit, Amelia Gray delivers an incredibly imaginative portrait of the artist In 1913, the restless world sat on the brink of unimaginable suffering. But for one woman, the darkness of a new era had already made itself at home. Isadora Duncan would come to be known as the mother of modern dance, but in the spring of 1913 she was a grieving mother, after a freak accident in Paris resulted in the drowning death of her two young children. The accident cracked Isadora's life in two: on one side, the brilliant young talent who captivated audiences the world over; on the other, a heartbroken mother spinning dangerously on the edge of sanity.

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Publishers Weekly Review

Gray follows her powerful 2015 short story collection Gutshot with an uneven novel about dancer and choreographer Isadora Duncan. In 1913, at the peak of her career, Duncan's children, six-year-old Deirdre and toddler Patrick, drown in the Seine when the car in which she has sent them home from a restaurant lunch plunges into the river. To assuage her grief and guilt-and avoid a clamoring public-Duncan, the children's ashes in tow, departs Paris for Corfu, Turkey, Albania, and the Italian port of Viareggio. As she battles physical illness and mental collapse, she spends time with her brothers Augustin and Raymond; her sister, Elizabeth, who runs a school in Darmstadt based on Isadora's methods; and legendary actress Eleonora Duse, among others. By the time she returns to France to dance again, she is forever changed, if not fully healed. Gray's striking, sensual language is perfectly suited to her visionary protagonist, and the novel shimmers with memorable prose. But a surfeit of mundane moments narrated in the perspectives of secondary characters (including Elizabeth, her lover Max Merz, and Duncan's lover, sewing machine heir Paris Singer) blunts its emotional power. Gray's 2012 novel, Threats, used similarly brief, disjunctive segments to build toward a compelling whole; in contrast, Isadora spreads its attention too thin to fully capitalize on any of its narrative's-or its author's-rich possibilities. (May) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* Historical novels about artists abound, but few attain the psychological intricacy, fluency of imagination, lacerating wit, or intoxicating beauty of Gray's tale of Isadora Duncan, the courageous mother of modern dance. Gray (Gutshot, 2015), known for her venturesome short stories, focuses on one traumatic year in Duncan's altogether dramatic life as a seductive dancer who scandalously rejected the rigidity of ballet to return to the essence of dance, performing her flowing choreography barefoot and in gossamer tunics. Isadora is in Paris in 1913, amid the dark stirrings of war, when her young daughter and son, along with their nanny, drown in a bizarre car accident. Gray's deeply inquisitive and empathic story of epic grief is composed of short, intense chapters expressing the divergent points of view of four contentious characters: extravagantly theatrical Isadora; her exceedingly wealthy and pragmatic lover, Paris Singer; her frustrated sister, Elizabeth, who teaches the radical Duncan method; and her fellow instructor, the ineptly scheming Max. As Isadora plunges into near madness, then slowly reclaims her artistic powers, Gray, performing her own extraordinary artistic leap, explores the nexus between body and mind, loss and creativity, love and ambition, and birth and death. The spellbinding result is a mythic, fiercely insightful, mordantly funny, and profoundly revelatory portrait of an intrepid and indelible artist.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2017 Booklist

Kirkus Book Review

Captivating historical fiction from the award-winning author of Threats (2012) and Museum of the Weird (2010).As the "mother of modern dance," Isadora Duncan pioneered a style of movement that released the body from the rigid discipline of ballet. Her choreography favored free-flowing movements designed to seem more like spontaneous expression than a practiced performance. At first, the feverish, practically Gothic voice that Gray invents for her protagonist seems an odd fit for a woman inspired by the simple lines and unadorned grace of classical art and architecture, but, as the reader goes deeper into Isadora's world, Gray's choice begins to make perfect sense. Duncan's modernism included the concept of the artist as rogue and celebritysomeone whose creativity demanded freedom from everyday norms. And, certainly, fate played a role in making Duncan extraordinary in life and in death. This novel begins when the dancer's two small children drown in the Seine, and early chapters depict Duncan's immediate reaction to this awful tragedy. To say that she is not restrained in her grieving would be a dramatic understatement, but it soon becomes clear that restraint simply is not part of her makeup. Gray's prose is over-the-top but utterly apt. Isadora's words are gorgeous even when they are grisly, and Gray does a terrific job of depicting not just the bereavement of a mother, but also the bereavement of a mother for whom life is a source of fuel for art. Gray also makes the canny choice to include other narrators, observers whose cooler viewpoints are expressed in the third person. Paris Singer, heir to his father's sewing-machine fortune and the father of her son, is the one who takes care of quotidian details while Isadora pursues her muse. And her sister, Elizabeth, is also an excellent foil. As the administrator of the schools founded by the dancer, Elizabeth depends upon Isadora. But, more than anyone, Elizabeth recognizes the performative aspect of Isadora's everyday existence. Together, these interwoven voices tell the story of a singular genius at one of the turning points of history, the moment when the promises of modernism give way to the first total war. A novel equal to its larger-than-life protagonist. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Author notes provided by Syndetics

Amelia Gray is the author of several books, including AM/PM , Museum of the Weird , THREATS , and Gutshot . Her fiction and essays have appeared in The New Yorker , The New York Times , The Wall Street Journal , Tin House ,and VICE . She has been a finalist for the PEN/Faulkner Award for Fiction and for the New York Public Library Young Lions Fiction Award, and is the winner of the FC2 Ronald Sukenick Innovative Fiction Contest. She lives in Los Angeles.

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