A masterful novel about the son of a great painter striving to create his own legacy, by the bestselling author of The Imperfectionists.
Conceived while his father, Bear, cavorted around Rome in the 1950s, Pinch learns quickly that Bear's genius trumps all. After Bear abandons his family, Pinch strives to make himself worthy of his father's attention—first trying to be a painter himself; then resolving to write his father's biography; eventually settling, disillusioned, into a job as an Italian teacher in London. But when Bear dies, Pinch hatches a scheme to secure his father's legacy—and make his own mark on the world.
With his signature humanity and humor, Tom Rachman examines a life lived in the shadow of greatness, cementing his place among his generation's most exciting literary voices.
-
Creators
-
Publisher
-
Release date
March 20, 2018 -
Formats
-
Kindle Book
- ISBN: 9780735222717
-
OverDrive Read
- ISBN: 9780735222717
- File size: 1667 KB
-
EPUB ebook
- ISBN: 9780735222717
- File size: 1589 KB
-
-
Languages
- English
-
Reviews
-
Library Journal
October 15, 2017
Raised in 1950s Rome, Pinch has a genius painter of a father named Bear, who eventually abandons the family. Pinch tries to get his attention by becoming a painter himself, then by writing Bear's biography, but he's not a smashing success and ends up teaching Italian in London. Then Bear dies, and Pinch dreams up a way to assure his father's legacy while making a name for himself. Rachman's hugely best-selling The Imperfectionists, plus The Rise & Fall of Great Powers, were both multi-best-booked titles.
Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
-
Publisher's Weekly
Starred review from January 15, 2018
In Rachman’s artful third page-turner (after The Rise & Fall of Great Powers), the son of a world-renowned painter struggles to escape the dark shadow cast by his father. Born in Rome to a mistress turned bride, Pinch Bavinsky only sees his domineering father, Bear, during the elder’s summer visits to Europe. After a trip by teenage Pinch to 1960s New York ends with Bear crushing his artistic ambitions, the son abandons his dreams of painting to embark on a failed career in academia before becoming a foreign language instructor in London. The most trusted of Bear’s 17 children, Pinch appoints himself overseer of his aging father’s work, and much of the novel’s well-staged tension emerges from Pinch’s choice in the early aughts to paint a reproduction of one of Bear’s paintings and sell it, passing it off as one of his father’s. Spanning the 1950s to the present, the novel does traffic a bit in familiar notions of the art world and difficult artists, but its subversion of these tropes makes for a satisfying examination of authorship and authenticity, and a fine fictionalization of how crafting an identity independent of one’s parents can be a lifelong, worthwhile project. -
Kirkus
January 15, 2018
In his poignant latest, Rachman (The Rise & Fall of Great Powers, 2014, etc.) examines a life dominated by someone else's art.Pinch worships his father, noted painter Bear Bavinsky, although Bear's behavior amply justifies the warning of Pinch's stepsister Birdie, daughter of the wife discarded for Pinch's mother, Natalie: "Everything's always about his art....He doesn't hardly care about his actual creations...the human ones." By the time Pinch is 15 in 1965, Bear has moved back to America from Italy and on to a third wife and more kids (eventual total: 17). Stuck in Rome with the increasingly unstable Natalie, Pinch desperately wants to stay connected to his elusive father. Rachman perfectly nails the charm with which Bear cloaks his selfishness and keeps his needy son both at a distance and firmly under his thumb. Bear skillfully deflects Pinch's plea to come live with him by saying it wouldn't be fair to Natalie and passes a devastating judgment on the boy's fledgling paintings: "You're not an artist. And you never will be." Pinch goes to college in Toronto, planning to become an art historian and write his father's biography, and it seems this will be the story of an impossible parent destroying a vulnerable offspring, especially after Bear sabotages Pinch's first serious love affair and Pinch winds up teaching Italian at a Berlitz-style language school in London. But the balance of power between them shifts over the years in Rachman's subtle rendering. Bear's reputation goes into eclipse, and he confides the unsold paintings in his remote French cottage to Pinch, whom he trusts to protect his legacy. The way Pinch claims some turf for himself while remaining entangled in Bear's shadow leads to an ironic conclusion that also shimmers with love and regret. Pinch's best friend and late-in-life lover, two of the novel's many finely rendered secondary characters, drink a rueful toast to a man who refused to be anyone's victim--except maybe his own.A sensitive look at complicated relationships that's especially notable for the fascinatingly conflicted protagonist.COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
-
Library Journal
January 1, 2018
This latest from Rachman (The Imperfectionists) follows the life of Charles (Pinch) Bavinsky, son of narcissistic painter Bear Bavinsky. A mid-20th-century phenomenon, Bear falls out of fashion once pop art and postmodernism take hold, leaving a string of ex-wives and children in his wake as he continues to coast on his fame and ego without producing any more work. The unassuming and middling Pinch, in awe of Bear and wishing to accomplish something to impress his father, fails as a painter and academic. He fails as well as at romantic relationships and ends up as a language teacher in London. Not until late middle age does he discover a path to self-actualization and a form of power and success. Presenting a life chronologically has fallen somewhat out of fashion, but Rachman demonstrates the power of this sort of storytelling. Without the distractions of flashbacks and multiple narrators, Pinch's trajectory slowly builds momentum. Seemingly insignificant events and conversations take on great import years or decades later, and readers will take pleasure in the discoveries. VERDICT Along with the skewering of art-world and academic pretensions, there is humor, humanity, and compassion in Rachman's writing. For most fiction readers. [See Prepub Alert, 9/25/17.]--Christine DeZelar-Tiedman, Univ. of Minnesota Libs., Minneapolis
Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
-
Loading
Why is availability limited?
×Availability can change throughout the month based on the library's budget. You can still place a hold on the title, and your hold will be automatically filled as soon as the title is available again.
The Kindle Book format for this title is not supported on:
×Read-along ebook
×The OverDrive Read format of this ebook has professional narration that plays while you read in your browser. Learn more here.