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Synopsis Max Meyer lives in an English seaside town, where he is engaged in the task of immortalizing the old houses there in a series of paintings. Lily Brannan arrives in the village, researching the work of an architect who, like Max, found refuge there from Nazi Germany. There are some odd and vital connections between the architect and Max, and parallels between Max's life and Lily's that come to light in the course of the story. And Lily is presented with a new dilemma: as she becomes disillusioned with her architect boyfriend back home, she is increasingly attracted to a local man, who is married. The village scene is vividly rendered in this tale of art and life and the sometimes unexpected ways they intersect.
| Size | | Length: | 288 pages | | Height: | 9.0 in | | Width: | 6.3 in | | Thickness: | 1.0 in | | Weight: | 20.0 oz |
Industry Reviews "The novel's setting is small-town, but its thematic scope is generous....Freud has constructed her novel with beautiful precision." Publishers Weekly (02/23/2004)
"...Freud's gift for vivid characterization is such that she manages to turn the village's seaside topography into a sentient being, with its own stores of memory and malice." New Yorker (05/10/2004)
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