At nine years old, on her first visit to a museum, Emily fell in love with Breakfast, a painting by Henri Matisse. Now a single mother, she lives in the world of art and can barely find time for her two daughters, much less for Mark, the man she loves. Her days are a jumble-she's lost the thread of her life-but a contest at the museum where she's the registrar gives her hope-the chance to see Breakfast again. Matisse's words and paintings permeate her days and nights, and glancing at a note card of the painting she loves, she sees something she's never seen before. The Art of Her Life shows the power of art to transform an ordinary life.
At nine years old, on her first visit to a museum, Emily fell in love with Breakfast, a painting by Henri Matisse. Now a single mother, she lives in the world of art and can barely find time for her two daughters, much less for Mark, the man she loves. Her days are a jumble-she's lost the thread of her life-but a contest at the museum where she's the registrar gives her hope-the chance to see Breakfast again. Matisse's words and paintings permeate her days and nights, and glancing at a note card of the painting she loves, she sees something she's never seen before. The Art of Her Life shows the power of art to transform an ordinary life.
Cynthia Newberry Martin's first novel, Tidal Flats, won the Gold Medal in Literary Fiction at the 2020 Independent Publisher Book Awards and the 14th Annual National Indie Excellence Award for Fiction. Her website features the How We Spend Our Days series, over a decade of essays by writers on their lives. She grew up in Atlanta and now lives in Columbus, Georgia, with her husband, and in Provincetown, Massachusetts, in a little house by the water. Her second novel, Love Like This, will be published in April of 2023.
Cynthia Newberry Martin's new novel is a bold transcendent
meditation on desire, memory, motherhood, and the power of art to
remake a life. I loved this book. I could not put it down. There's
a spare lyric grace to Martin's writing, and in this story, she
captures the nuances of ordinary life - what we love and fear to
risk, what we lose and ache to hold. The Art of Her Life is a rare,
exquisite work of fiction -Dawn Tripp, author of Georgia, a novel
of Georgia O'Keeffe
Cynthia Newberry Martin is a deeply gifted writer. The Art of Her
Life should be placed on the same shelf as A.S. Byatt's The Matisse
Stories. When tragic things happen to the character of Emily, she
becomes devoted to a kind of Gospel of Henri Matisse, and she gets
lost in the artist's life in order to find her own life again. This
is a family story; this is a love story. But the novel combines
these in profound and original ways. The splendid prose is tinted
with the inimitable melancholy of Matisse's blue. -Howard Norman,
author of The Ghost Clause
In The Art of Her Life, Cynthia Newberry Martin tenderly and
delicately shows how the unexpected turns of a life can most often
only be steadied and moored by what we hold deepest inside. It is
told with no punches pulled. No self-interrogation spared. Just a
keen and blunt honesty. A lovely and moving novel that celebrates
the legacy of the creative spirit, the power and salvation of art,
and the challenges in balancing an intellectual life with an
emotional life. -Adam Braver, author of Rejoice the Head of Paul
McCartney With grace and clarity, Cynthia Newberry Martin paints in
this novel a lasting portrait of love and family, of love and
perseverance, of love and beauty and care and heart. Even in the
face of loss, every brushstroke of life becomes somehow sacred, a
blessing, an abundance. -William Lychack, author of Cargill Falls
The Art of Her Life is a rare book about an adult woman with the
full complement of responsibilities-children, job, love,
passions-grappling with how to manage and juggle them. Matisse's
art, and the painting Breakfast in particular, is a character in
this gorgeous book-his use of color and channeling of emotion form
lifelines for our protagonist. Matisse accompanies Emily on her
journey as she learns that, paradoxically, it is only through
surrender that we can feel life's wholeness. I loved this book.
-Lindsey Mead, editor of On Being Forty(ish)
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