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Girl with a Pearl Earring.
Chevalier, Tracy (author).
Jan. 2000. 240p. Fine Arts, hardcover, $23.95 (0-525-94527-X).
REVIEW.
First published December 1, 1999 (Booklist).
Inspired by Vermeer’s painting of the same name, Chevalier creates an elegant and intriguing story of how a young peasant girl came to have her portrait painted. It is seventeenth-century Holland, and 16-year-old Griet is obliged to take a job as a maid for the artist Vermeer after her father loses his eyesight in an accident. She does the laundry, cares for the six children, and cleans house, but her easy manner and natural artistic perceptions ingratiate her to Vermeer, and she finds herself drawn into his world--mixing colors, cleaning his studio, and standing in for his models. This new intimacy between master and servant crosses strict social divisions, inspires jealousy in his wife, Catharina, as well as the other maid, and sparks rumors in town. At the insistence of his patron, Vermeer paints Griet wearing his wife’s pearl earring. When Catharina sees the painting, a scandal erupts, and Griet is forced to make some life-altering decisions. This is a beautiful story of a young girl’s coming-of-age, and it is delightful speculative fiction about the subject in a painting by an Old Master. (Reviewed December 1, 1999) Carolyn Kubisz
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