Claude & Camille: A Novel of Monet
Claude & Camille: A Novel of Monet book cover

Claude & Camille: A Novel of Monet

Paperback – April 5, 2011

Price
$15.00
Format
Paperback
Pages
340
Publisher
Crown
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0307463227
Dimensions
5.17 x 0.72 x 8.01 inches
Weight
9.3 ounces

Description

“Once again the acclaimed novelist Stephanie Cowell deftly takes us into the world of the classical arts with her well researched and beautifully written novel of historical fiction, Claude & Camille .”-- LAxa0Times Book Examiner 5 Stars (Examiner.com)“Cowell is nothing short of masterful in writing about Claude Monet’s life and love….An enthralling story, beautifully told.”--The Boston Globe"What a man! I am in awe before him. To be swept up by this novel which reveals the man and woman behind--no, in, the waterlily paintings, the seascapes and landscapes, is, and must be, a heartbreak. For me, reading Claude and Camille is like seeing old friends, learning them anew, from the inside, their passionate lives pulsing again by virtue of Stephanie Cowell's sure pen. The story is lovely, touching, delicately written, extraordinarily compelling, and nearly all true. Read it with a book of Monet's paintings by your side, and be prepared to marvel, and to weep."--Susan Vreeland, author Luncheon of the Boating Party and Girl in Hyacinth Blue" You’ll never look at Monet’s water lilies the same way after reading Cowell’s luminous biography of the artist and his muse" – Romantic Times (4 Stars) “ Rich and satisfying…Cowell seems poised on the cusp of very great things.” –January Magazine"There's more than one love triangle involved in this highly recommended tale. Don't miss Claude & Camille ."-- BookLoons "Fleshing out the artist’s biographical outline with fresh imagery, well-paced dramatic scenes and carefully calculated dialogue, Cowell presents a vivid portrait of Monet’s remarkable career. She writes with intelligence and reverence for her subject matter, providing a rich exploration of the points at which life and art converged for one of history’s greatest painters."-- Booklist "With elegant prose that blends color, light, and shadow to perfection, much as Monet did in hisxa0canvasses, Stephanie Cowell offers us a gorgeously rendered tale of love, genius, andxa0haunting loss set against the dramatic backdrop of a world on the verge of inescapablexa0change."—C.W. Gortner, author of The Last Queen “Stephanie Cowell ‘s Monet and his Camille are achingly real, and the miserable garrets of Paris where they struggle to survive are so sensitively portrayed you can almost smell the paint.xa0 Cowell sweeps the reader up into a story as dazzling and turbulent as the art whosexa0creation shexa0depicts.”—Laurel Corona, author of Four Seasons “Claude & Camille is a wonderfully absorbing and romantic novel, the story of Claude Monet's passion for his painting and his equally passionate love for a woman who is as elusive as the water lilies that he strove to capture on canvas. This elegant novel was hard to put down, and once I did, I rushed to view Monet's paintings with a deeper understanding. Stephanie Cowell is a wonderful writer.”—Sandra Gulland, author of the Josephine B. trilogy and M is tress of the Sun “An engaging, lyrical, and spirited work of fiction about the great love of Monet's life.xa0Cowell creates a vivid world here, of art, friendship, and ardent love within the Impressionist circle.”—Harriet Scott Chessman, author of Lydia Cassatt Reading the Morning Paper “Stephanie Cowell’s new novel of art and love is focused on Claude Monet’s great passions: painting, friendship, and Camille Doncieux. With her uncanny ability to inhabit the hearts of historical characters, Cowell creates a wholly fascinating milieu as vividly as a film-maker. She has a special gift for rendering the scene--knowing which moments excite the reader, illuminate the characters, and create memorability. I was touched by the novel’s tenderness and compassion, and moved to immerse myself in my books of Impressionist paintings.”—Sandra Scofield, author of Opal on Dry Ground and Occasions of Sin “ Claude & Camille offers a fascinating look at nineteenth-century Paris, the bohemian lives of the Impressionists, and their struggle to create a new way of seeing the world. From Parisian ateliers to Giverny’s lush gardens, Stephanie Cowell paints an unforgettable portrait of Claude Monet and the two passions that framed his life: his beautiful, tragic wife, Camille, and his pursuit of art.”—Christi Phillips, author of The Devlin Diary STEPHANIE COWELL is the author of Nicholas Cooke: Actor, Soldier, Physician, Priest ; The Physician of London (American Book Award 1996) and The Players: A Novel of the Young Shakespeare . She is the also the author of Marrying Mozart , which was translated into seven languages and has been optioned for a movie. Visit her at www.stephaniecowell.com and http://everydaylivesfrenchimpressionists.blogspot.com. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. PRELUDE GivernyJuly 1908 Dull late-afternoon light glittered on the hanging copper pots in the kitchen where the old painter sat with his wine, smoking a cigarette, a letter angrily crumpled on the table in front of him. Through the open window he could hear the sound of a few flies buzzing near one of the flower beds, and the voices of the gardener and his son, who were talking softly as they pushed their wheelbarrow over the paths of the vast garden.He had meant to paint his water lily pond again, but after the letter had come he could do nothing. Even now, he felt the bitter words rising from the ink. “Why do you write me after all these years, Monet? I still hold you responsible for the death of my sister, Camille. There can be no communication between us.”Outside, the day was ending, smelling of sweet grass and roses. He swallowed the last of his wine and stood suddenly, smoothing the letter and thrusting it in his pocket. “You foolish woman,” he said under his breath. “You never understood.”Head lowered, he made his way up the stairs to the top floor, under the sloping attic roof, and down the hall to the locked door. He had worked in this small studio briefly when he first moved here years before and could not remember the last time he had gone inside.Dust lay on the half-used tubes of paint on the table; palette knives and brushes of every size rested in jars. Rolled canvas and wood for stretchers leaned against a wall. Past the table stood a second door, which opened to a smaller room with another easel and an old blue-velvet-upholstered armchair. He lowered himself onto the chair, hands on his knees, and looked about him. The room was filled with pictures of Camille.There was one of her embroidering in the garden with a child at her feet, and another of her reading on the grass with her back against a tree, the sun coming through the leaves onto her pale dress. She was as elusive as light. You tried to grasp it and it moved; you tried to wrap your arms around it and found it gone.It had been many years since he had found her in the bookshop. He saw himself then, handsome enough, with a dark beard, dark eyes flickering, swaggering a bit—a young man who did not doubt himself for long and yet who under it all was a little shy. The exact words they spoke to each other that day were lost to him; when he tried to remember, they faded. He recalled clearly, though, the breathless tone of her voice, the bones of her lovely neck, and her long fingers, and that she stammered slightly.There she stood in his first portrait of her, when she was just nineteen, wearing the green promenade dress with the long train behind her, looking over her shoulder, beautiful, disdainful, as she had appeared nearly half a century before. He rose and lightly touched the canvas. Sometimes he dreamt he held her; that he would turn in bed and she would be there. But she was gone, and he was old. Nearly seventy. Only cool paint met his fingers. “Ma très chère . . .”Darkness started to fall, dimming the paintings. He felt the letter in his pocket. “I loved you so,” he said. “I never would have had it turn out as it did. You were with all of us when we began; you gave us courage. These gardens at Giverny are for you, but I’m old and you’re forever young and will never see them. I’ll write your sister again at her shop in Paris. She must understand; she must know how it was.”Outside, twilight was falling on the gardens, and the water lilies would be closing for the night. He wiped his eyes and sat for a time to calm himself. Looking around once more, he left the studio and slowly descended the stairs. Read more

Features & Highlights

  • A vividly-rendered portrait of both the rise of Impressionism and of the artist at the center of the movement,
  • Claude and Camille
  • is above all a love story of the highest romantic order.
  • In the mid-nineteenth century, a young man named Claude Monet decided that he would rather endure a difficult life painting landscapes than take over his father’s nautical supplies business in a French seaside town. Against his father’s will, and with nothing but a dream and an insatiable urge to create a new style of art that repudiated the Classical Realism of the time, he set off for Paris. But once there he is confronted with obstacles: an art world that refused to validate his style, extreme poverty, and a war that led him away from his home and friends. But there were bright spots as well: his deep, enduring friendships with men named Renoir, Cézanne, Pissarro, Manet—a group that together would come to be known as the Impressionists, and that supported each other through the difficult years. Even more illuminating was his lifelong love, Camille Doncieux, a beautiful, upper-class Parisian girl who threw away her privileged life to be by the side of the defiant painter and embrace the lively Bohemian life of their time.  His muse, his best friend, his passionate lover, and the mother to his two children, Camille stayed with Monet—and believed in his work—even as they lived in wretched rooms and often suffered the indignities of destitution. But Camille had her own demons—secrets that Monet could never penetrate—including one that when eventually revealed would pain him so deeply that he would never fully recover from its impact.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(394)
★★★★
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(328)
★★★
15%
(197)
★★
7%
(92)
23%
(301)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Claude and Camille

Claude and Camille is a novel about Claude Monet and his first wife, Camille. I've always loved Monet's paintings and I knew quite a bit about his later life but not so much about his early life and I was very excited to find this book.

Unfortunately, I ended up very disappointed. I felt the book was a little disjointed. It jumps from important event to important event but it doesn't feel very connected until closer towards the end. Mostly I didn't like Camille very much. I didn't think she was very well developed. Especially when I learned that an affair she confesses about to Monet, which really affects your opinion of her, is completely fictional. I realize (and love) that historical fiction is not straight history, that the author sees the pieces and then fills in the blanks. But I've always seen this as more of a filling in of character's motivations, showing alternative historical possibilities, giving a historical personage feelings and character not found in a dry textbook. I don't see historical fiction as a place to make something up about a character that has absolutely no basis in research. Could an affair have happened, it is possible of course, but the author divulges that there is no basis for that assumption in her author's note. I found that part of the book...frustrating.

I did enjoy all the parts of the book where Claude is an old man who is painting the water lilies. I also liked Alice Hoschede who later becomes Monet's second wife. The part where Camille and Claude share their house with Alice and her children is true and I thought that whole section was very well written.

Mostly, I ended up very disappointed in this book and recommend reading something else.
14 people found this helpful
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Beautiful Depiction of Birth of Impressionism

This story starts with Claude Monet at the age of 17. He is failing at school and getting estranged from his father.

What makes sense to him at this point is to take an older painter’s offer of Eugene Boudin and study painting with him. Hid dream of being caricaturist has to be put on hold.

The same summer his mother passes away and he throws himself at painting with Boudin for the next three years.

He continues his art schooling in Paris. There, he meets Renoir, Pissarro, Cezanne, and Edouard Manet. The last one “was the only one of them who had already gained some public recognition.”

When he needs to clear his head, he goes for a walk by the River Seine. One day, while on his walk he decides to enter a bookshop. There he sees a young woman with red hair, the one he saw at a train station four years earlier. He asks her to model for his new painting of picnickers.

Camille becomes his love and his greatest muse.

Once his painting of The Woman in the Green Dress becomes success, his father admits “that perhaps he had been wrong to stand against his gifted son.”

After many struggles, Monet and his artist friends put an exhibit, after which they become recognized as Impressionists. At last, a name was born, Impressionism, to their struggles to be recognized.

The book skillfully-depicts painters’ struggle to achieve recognition as most of them during their time were not recognized. It also, beautifully presents love of hardship and friendship lasting through good and bad times with the love of his life as well as his friends.
8 people found this helpful
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NOT a Good Impression...

From this book, I did learn about the friendships and support among the Impressionists...Monet, Renoir, Brazile, Pisarro..and their tremendous support, both financial and emotional, for each other. I also did appreciate the actual quotes by artists, dealers and critics at the beginning of each chapter. If it had not been for what I learned, I would have given this book only 1 star as I found the writing incredibly simplistic...actually boring. I couldn't wait to finish it.
7 people found this helpful
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Sappy

This is a poorly written love story with little insight to the artist or his muse. The incidental presence of the other Impresssionists is a plus but the dialogue is stilted and unrealistic.
6 people found this helpful
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Monet at his most vulnerable

Loved it. This book was certainly a good read; it was a complicated love story that doesn't oblige the reader to spin any wheels wondering about the happy ending. We know from the beginning that there isn't one, because the elder Monet is still trying to make sense of what happened. What it does do is prepare us for questions that need to be answered, and encourages us to appreciate any fleeting moments of happiness that we suspect won't last.

Most of the book takes place in Monet's younger years, when he is still experimenting with his art and creating a fellowship with other like-minded artists that haven't yet become impressionists. We suffer with them through years of poverty and frustration; it seems that our perception of their solidarity 100+ years later is more wishful thinking than actuality. Their struggle just to survive was fraught with disappointment; they can barely scrape together enough money to host their own art shows that mostly garner public indifference. In their early hopeful years they support each other and share the occasional bounty, but as they get older their fractured lives seem to intersect less and less frequently. The Franco-Prussian war shatters their lives as it shatters Paris.

It is in this environment that Monet falls in love with Camille, who abandons her upscale lifestyle and family for the impoverished but hopeful artist. It struck me that they might have been better off had they gone their separate ways, but love doesn't always follow common sense. It seems that they are rarely quite comfortable with their choices and indeed, both try to flee in their own way. But they keep coming back together and I found myself grieving for them as things went from bad to worse.

I kept waiting for Monet to reach a level of comfortable respectability, but alas, the more lucrative years are outside the scope of this story. Or did it ever happen for him? Even in his later years, as he prepares his water lilies for a successful exhibition, we capture a hint that he was never really happy, and perhaps that's the saddest part of all.
5 people found this helpful
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Love is a Many-splendored Thing

To read this gem of a novel is like entering an Impressionist painting and becoming immersed in its vibrant colors, glistening hilights, and hidden shadows. As a love story, it traces the arc of Claude Monet's life-long passion for Camille Doncieux, the woman who was his sweetheart, his muse, the mother of his two children, and, later, his wife.

But Claude and Camille also captures the love of art that drives artists to pawn their few possessions for tubes of paint, borrow repeatedly from friends and relatives to stave off creditors, suffer repeated evictions from lodgings, stay outside all day in freezing temperatures in order to capture the play of light on waves or snow covered fields.

In his early painting days, Claude and his friend Fédéric Bazille share a studio in Paris that quickly becomes the hub of activity for several artist friends, among them, Renoir, Pissarro, Cezanne, Degas. All the young painters are filled with visions of a new way of painting. The future seems promising, despite the fact that most of them are in debt. Almost all of them are artists against family wishes: Claude's father wants him to take over his nautical supplies shop in Le Havre. Bazille's family wants him to become a doctor.

Claude first sees Camille in a train station in Paris. Arrested by her beauty, he makes a quick sketch of her before she vanishes. Then he comes across her by accident in her uncle's bookshop four years later. It seems destiny. Accepting his invitation to pose for a painting, Camille brings her sister to Fontainebleau as a chaperone. Later, in Paris, Camille poses again for Claude, and the portrait is accepted by the Salon in the Palais de l'Industrie. When he takes her to see the exhibit, convent-educated Camille decides she's in love with him and leaves her family and her fiancé to become Claude's lover and the darling of his circle of friends.

But Camille--Minou to friends and family--is a bundle of mysteries and contradictions: She wants to go on stage. She wants to write a novel. She wants to have lots of children. She has moods. A devoted muse and passionate lover, Camille's life centers around Claude. Or does it? Her own mother whispers to Claude in one scene, "There are things you don't yet understand about our Minou . . ."

This book was so good, I read it twice. The author's rendering of the Impressionists' world reflects her thorough research. Characters and settings come alive. The lives that unfold are entirely believable. This is a must read for history lovers, art lovers and anyone who just likes a good story.
4 people found this helpful
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Cowell paints Monet's love story!

Most readers, of course, need no introduction to Claude Monet, known for all those impressionistic paintings of water lilies, landscapes, cathedrals, and beautiful women, but most may not know that while painting his way into art history, he was also painting the town red! Alas, though, more often blue, when it came to his personal relationships.

"In Claude and Camille," Stephanie Cowell provides a fictional insight into the great artist and his relationship to the (main) woman in his life, Camille Doncieux. While the book at times reads like an annotated biography, it actually is a perceptive love story that exhibits his life-long passion for Camille, “his sweetheart, his muse, the mother of his two children, and (later!) his wife,” as Cowell tells us.

Monet’s love life is also intertwined with his passion for art and his relationship with the burgeoning artistic movement, mainly out of 19th century Paris, as he consorts with the likes of Renoir, Pissarro, Manet, Bazille, and Cezanne, among others. It’s also a good art history moment—not so scholarly (at all) that it bogs down in minutiae but keeping with a fast-paced narrative that moves well. It’s not so much only about artists struggling to pay their bills but about one artist struggling to balance his personal life and his artistic one. Monet emerges as a good literary character, whether accurate or not (it’s a work of historical fiction, remember, or perhaps "alternative facts"!). Readers will enjoy all those lilies and his gardens at Giverny, as well as getting additional insight into this Father of Impressionism.
3 people found this helpful
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Read this before going toyour next impressionist museum.

Before you leave for Paris to see Monet's gardens and all his wonderful paintings you must read this book. It puts everything from the Impressionist era into perspective. You will understand and enjoy Monet's relationship with his wife/muse and also the relationships between himself and other painters of the era. As you walk around museums and see all the impressionist paintings you will feel like you know the artists personally because of the stories in this book.
3 people found this helpful
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Art, Love and Water Lilies

Stephanie Cowell is a wonderfully imaginative and engaging novelist. In "Claude and Camille" she uses elegant prose and descriptive detail in a compelling narrative, telling the story of young Monet and his first wife and model, Camille Doncieux. While the story of a struggling young artist and the woman who sacrifices wealth and social position to share her lover's hard life is a familiar one, Ms. Cowell tells it with great skill and fresh psychological insight. What's more, she re-creates the world of the Impressionists brilliantly, putting the reader in each and every scene as though he or she were living and breathing the same air as the characters.

While some things have been fictionalized for dramatic effect, the story is for the most part accurate and the product of extensive research and attention to period detail. But that detail is carefully interwoven into the story, and never seems obtrusive. And Ms. Cowell offers the astute reader an interesting theory about old Monet's obsession with the water lilies in his garden at Giverny. In sum, this is an outstanding example of historical fiction at its best.

Gary Inbinder, author of The Flower to the Painter
3 people found this helpful
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Monet's financial problems

I applaud Stephanie Cowell for capturing the inner life of an iconic artist. The relationship between Claude and Camille is passionate and tender. He is the struggling artist captivated by his muse, and devoted to providing a life for her through art. She is the rebellious and romantic teenager who falls in love with someone outside of her parent's approval, and remains devoted to him despite all their hardships. When we look at Monet's work, most of them landscapes, they are so pretty and soothing and accepted today. Therefore it is insightful to understand how original he was and how difficult it was to gain recognition. The beautiful work came from a depth of passion, of standing in freezing cold weather day after day, from deep commitment to his craft despite the poverty and lack of recognition. It was at times heartbreaking to read about the emotional turmoil of wanting to pursue his art and his struggle to make a living so that he could provide Camille with a comfortable life. A lot of the book was about Monet's financial problems and their various struggles to eke out a living. This was rather depressing for me because I read this book at a time when I was going through financial and physical hardship and wanted something to read to escape reality. Instead, there was a lot of impoverishment and not much success. The first half was rather slow but the last third of the book was very interesting and moving.
2 people found this helpful