Wednesday, July 24, 2013

MARIE, DANCING by Carolyn Meyer




Carolyn Meyer, Marie, Dancing (Gulliver Books, Harcourt, Inc., 2005). Unabridged recording read by Carine Montbertrand (Recorded Books, 2007).





(NOVEL)

Recommended by Wilda Morris



Dancing is the one thing that bring joy to fourteen-year-old Marie van Goethem, who studies at the dance school of the Paris Opera. But as her father lies dying, he asks Marie to promise to hold the family together. He tells her that her mother is too weak to do so, and her older sister is too selfish. Her father is especially concerned that the needs of Marie’s little sister be met. Marie’s mother succumbs to “the serpent with the green eyes,” a highly-addicting alcoholic beverage.

When the artist Edgar Degas asks Marie to pose in his art studio, Marie accepts because the extra income will help buy food. Instead of another painting, she learns, Degas is making sketches on which to base a sculpture. She does not want to pose nude, but Degas will pay more if she agrees to do so. It is not an easy decision for her.

What options are available to Marie in the Paris of the 1870s and 1880s? Will she accomplish her dream of dancing solo roles with the Paris Opera? Will she become the mistress of an abonné, as many of the dancers do? Will she find true love? Will she be able to prevent Charlotte from making the same bad decisions their their older sister Antoinette made? Will she be able to keep her promise to her father, and if so, what sacrifices will be required?

Carolyn Meyer became enthralled with Degas’ statue, “Little Dancer, Age 14.” She read books about Degas, frequented ballet studies, and went to Paris to do research for this book.

I enjoyed the Recorded Books version of Marie, Dancing. Marie van Goethem was a real person, as were her sisters (and of course Degas and the Cassatt sisters). Meyer researched the Paris Opera, Degas, and life in Paris during the late 1800s, then used her imagination to fill in the gaps. She has turned Marie’s story into a compelling novel. It is considered a “young adult novel,” but this "senior" adult enjoyed it very much.


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