I Always Loved You
By Robin Oliveira. (Viking, 343 pages, $27.95.)
Whatever the truth was between Mary Cassatt and Edgar Degas, we'll never know. Their letters went up in flames long ago, leaving only a century of speculation.
Robin Oliveira fills the void with an imaginative yet faithful story of what might have been.
The two artists/friends/collaborators (and lovers?) were stars of the Impressionist movement in Belle Epoque Paris. In real life, their friends and families wondered what went on between them in their studios.
In her novel, Oliveira opts for a love story, but she doesn't just make it up. Instead, much as Degas used wire and wood to shape his groundbreaking wax dancer, Oliveira shapes a tense romance around the known facts of their lives. How they worked and exhibited together, how he invited her to join the Impressionist shows, how she posed for him, how they often fought, both too strong-willed and talented to yield.
As their lives and work ebb, Oliveira notes the irony of Cassatt's fame for depicting mothers and children: "While Mary has painted love and seen love and been admired for seeing and painting love, somehow she has not managed to have love."
Although it helps to enjoy art and these artists, this well-told tale will satisfy readers who like "The Paris Wife" and other fact/fiction ensembles.
Maureen McCarthy,
Topics team leader