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Hardcover Domino Book

ISBN: 0802733786

ISBN13: 9780802733788

Domino

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Format: Hardcover

Condition: Very Good

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Book Overview

By the author of "The New York Times's" bestsellers "Michelangelo and the Pope's Ceiling, Brunelleschi's Dome," and the award-winning novel, "Ex-Libris."A "New York Times" "Notable Book," "The New... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

a voice teacher and early music fan (early history as well)

DOMINO= A MASK TO DISGUISE AND CONCEAL THE ACTUAL VISAGE OF THE MASQUERADER AND THAT'S WHAT THIS BOOK IS ALL ABOUT! But unless one has a special interest in this late 18th century era, it would be laborious reading indeed. However, if one does have an interest, as I do, it is worth 'wading' through. Though it is fiction, it reads very much like a documentary, though confusing at times. 'Domino' is a Rabelaisian journey, by internationally best-selling author, Ross King. Reaching into the world of 1770's London from the palatial palaces of the city's finest to their country manors, from the garret room of George Cautley, a hapless young struggling artist adrift in the gilded world he wants to conquer to the magnificent opera houses of Milan, with their deep dark secrets. Ross King, indeed, does much more than paint a portrait of a time long gone, but brings it to life, with an immediancy that only very fine historical writers can achieve. 'Domino' is the story of the inscrutable and beautiful Lady Beauclair, the castrato singer Tristano, and the unworldly Cautley, and Eleanora, mistress and muse. It tells how the young inexperienced Cautley makes his way through 18th century London high society, where nothing is as it seems and everyone wears a MASK. By way of dark and menacing maneuverings of the tempestuous immoral Lady Beauclair and the castrato Tristano as well as other characters, Cautley is drawn into a web of intrigue. Laced with black and somewhat evil humor, this picturesque tale of art, artists, patrons and ne'er-do-wells is filled with surprises, victories and tragedies told with the pace of a thriller and richness of a restored oil painting. Replete with mystery and immersed in historical details, THIS BOOK IS ALSO A PHILOSOPHICAL MUSING ON THE DISGUISES OF THE WORLD AND EVERYONE'S SEARCH FOR THE TRUTH.

Painterly masquerade

Narrator George Cautley is an old man at the opening of this lush, dense story of 18th century London, King's first novel (written before his bestsellers, "Ex-Libris" and "Brunelleschi's Dome"). At a masquerade ball Cautley captures a young man's attention with the portrait miniature of a beautiful woman known as Lady Beauclair. Cautley offers to tell the boy his - and her - story, a tale of innocence and masquerade, deception, jealousy and corruption, that ends, Cautley says, with his becoming a murderer.Cautley's narrative is actually two life histories, 50 years apart. His tale begins with his arrival in London in 1770 at age 17, and the second, Lady Beauclair's story of the operatic castrato Tristano, takes place 50 years earlier and is told to Cautley as Beauclair sits for her portrait. Yes, this becomes confusing, but the reader's disorientation is part of the fun, dovetailing playfully with King's themes of elusive identity, perception and deceptive appearance.Cautley comes to London seeking his fortune as a portrait painter. The orphaned son of a country parson, he is earnest, naïve, clumsy, ambitious, and a bit of a prig. A potent combination. Taken by his rich friend Toppie to one of the masquerades so popular at the time, Cautley is relieved of what little money he has by a set of genial card sharps who gladly lend him more. His resulting insurmountable debt turns out to be his best luck, as the lender is none other than the man Cautley has been trying to meet, the famous portrait painter Sir Endymion Starker.Later at the same party Cautley becomes disoriented by the numerous passageways, and is rescued by a glamorous costumed lady who bears a startling resemblance to a portrait he has just been admiring on the wall. Lady Beauclair invites Cautley to paint her portrait and hear the life story of the old man in the garden whose curious plight has caught Cautley's eye.Beauclair's lodgings are in a decrepit, even dangerous part of town, but her rooms are elegant and her portrait costume most provocative. As her dress slips down her shoulder and the light from a single candle dances over her artfully painted face, she relates the sad, passionate story of the impoverished Italian boy who became one of the greatest singers in Italy in the 1720s. Cautley, entranced by Beauclair's aspect, ("the face that, as its vizard was removed, tallied in every point with my youthful standard of beauty") intimidated by her boldness, and in awe of her mystery, disregards some of the more doubtful elements of her allure. Meanwhile, Cautley discharges his gambling debt to Starker, the great painter, by becoming his temporary apprentice. Starker has two studios - his big fashionable public address, where the rich come to have their portraits painted - and his secret, shabby bolt-hole where he keeps an angry mistress and paints his "true" art.Beauclair takes Tristano toward his fate in the London opera houses, Cautley succumbs to a corrosive jealousy, and Stark

Things Are Not Always What They Seem

In the 1770s, Geoge Cautley moved from the British countryside to find his fortune as an artist in London. George held firmly to the belief that appearances are everything, that one need not dig deeply to discover the true nature of one's friends and acquaitances, of events and occurences. George, in recounting his story years later, admits, in so many words, that he was dead wrong. Geoge's story is an amusing, engaging, complicated tale. The London he inhabits, with it's ridiculous wig and dress codes, is quite entertaining . He befriends Lady Beauclair, a woman who regales him with the story of Tristano, a man whose fortunes ultimately become entangled with George's. George, in recounting his story, certainly weaves a tangled web, but it is a fun web to unravel. Enjoy.

vivid eighteenth century European historical

Almost seventy and needing a walking stick to stay erect, artist George Cautley finds the attention of the eighteen year old boy he dubs Ganymede quite interesting even when the lad is more astonished at the portrait of Lady Beauclair. George tells the lad that the beauty was also dubbed "monstrous crime". Ganymede needs to hear her story so an amused George agrees to tell all he knows about the lovely lady he painted several decades ago.George explains that his fortune dramatically improved when he painted a portrait of sophisticated Lady Beauclair, who remits payment by telling him the tragic story of Tristano, who performed years earlier as a member of the Handel Opera Company. As Cautley meets others through his acquaintance with Lady Beauclair, he hears their stories. As he learns about the secret world of the Milan opera houses, George realizes that he might be the modern Tristano as his life begins to parallel that of the singer.Fans of eighteenth century European historicals will fully relish the depth of detail provided by Ross King in DOMINO. The plot loosely ties together the stories narrated by several characters while providing strong look at high society following the "South Sea Bubble" financial scandal that destroyed many fortunes. Though quite revealing of a world filled with duplicity and well written the over packed story line feels at times like standing room only at a Milan opera house or sardines in a can as there is no breathing room. Still sub-genre fans will appreciate this powerful period piece that makes the latter half of the eighteenth century come vividly alive.Harriet Klausner

Canadian Literature

A few years ago a few friends and I saw a movie that said there was no Canadian Literature. As the only American in the group they bombarded me with books - of all of them good, but two stood out. This was one of those two books. It's got history, suspence, wild adventure, sex, disgust- all the good makings of high drama and . . . literature.
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