Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
The Painter's Daughters
The Painter's Daughters: A Novel | Emily Howes
6 posts | 4 read | 10 to read
A beautifully written (Hilary Mantel) story of love, madness, sisterly devotion, and control, about the two beloved daughters of renowned 1700s English painter Thomas Gainsborough, who struggle to live up to the perfect image the world so admired in their portraits. Peggy and Molly Gainsboroughthe daughters of one of Englands most famous portrait artists of the 1700s and the frequent subject of his workare best friends. They spy on their father as he paints, rankle their mother as she manages the household, and run barefoot through the muddy fields that surround their home. But there is another reason they are inseparable: from a young age, Molly periodically experiences bouts of mental confusion, even forgetting who she is, and Peggy instinctively knows she must help cover up her sisters condition. When the family moves to Bath, its not so easy to hide Mollys slip-ups. There, the sisters are thrown into the whirlwind of polite society, where the codes of behavior are crystal clear. Molly dreams of a normal life but slides deeper and more publicly into her delusions. By now, Peggy knows the shadow of an asylum looms for women like Molly, and she goes to greater lengths to protect her sisters secret. But when Peggy unexpectedly falls in love with her fathers friend, the charming composer Johann Fischer, the sisters precarious situation is thrown catastrophically off course. Her burgeoning love for Johann sparks the bitterest of betrayals, forcing Peggy to question all she has done for Molly, and whether any one person can truly change the fate of another. A tense and tender examination of the blurred lines between protection and control, The Painters Daughters is a searing portrait of the real girls behind the canvas. Emily Howess debut is a stunning exploration of devotion, control, and individuality; it is a love song to sisterhood, to the many hues of life, and to being looked at but never really seen.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
TrishB
post image
Pickpick

Liked it, didn‘t love it and thought it dipped a lot in the middle.
Good historical detail and really interesting storyline.

review
MamaGina
post image
Pickpick

“We have left our slippers and balled-up stockings under a bush. When the mud gets too deep, Molly said we should turn back, but the blackberries are turning and will be gone soon, shriveled up or pecked away by birds. And I want them. So I nagged and pulled at her dress and called her boring and begged until she came too. It is always me who pulls us into trouble, one way or another.”
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

review
currentlyreadinginCO
post image
Pickpick

Haunting and beautiful historical fiction about Thomas Gainsborough's daughters 🔥🔥. The author writes young girls well and ages them naturally, giving their development a role in revealing this story's secrets. Gainsborough's paintings are referenced through the girls' memories of sitting for them and seeing them in their homes. I loved the writing, and gasped at the twists - also worth reading the bit about the art inspiring the plot at the end

55 likes3 stack adds
quote
charl08
post image

To survive this, to get what she wants, she must be a thief, a cleaner, a navigator, a fighter, a cook, a whore; she must be a sufferer of blisters and loneliness and pain, she must be a hard worker, she must be tough and determined and unbreakable, she must not be an idiot, and now she must be humble.

charl08 New poppy just opened in the garden. 7mo
humouress 💕 🌹 7mo
thegirlwiththelibrarybag This book looks so good! 7mo
39 likes3 comments
quote
charl08
post image

On the third night, we pull in to rest at Reading, the horses muddy and weary, and all of us battered half to death. A blotchy and rather cross-looking king creaks in the wind overhead. Another King's Head. How many heads can one king have, I wonder to Molly, who rolls her eyes as if I have said something silly.

Picture: https://www.nationalgallery.org.uk/paintings/thomas-gainsborough-the-painters-da...

blurb
Mitch
post image

Loving this so far. The ‘painter‘ Gainsborough was born and work a few towns over from where we live and I know his work well. It‘s really engaging to read the fictional story of how some his most famous pieces were painted - a real behind the scenes type tour!

tpixie I love those type of books about artists! I recently read about Mary Cassatt & Degas 10mo
Mitch @tpixie great recommendation- thank you 🙏 10mo
tpixie @Mitch yes! ☺️ 10mo
63 likes4 stack adds3 comments