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A review by minimicropup
The Painter's Daughters by Emily Howes
emotional
hopeful
mysterious
reflective
sad
tense
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.5
Was hesitant to read this since I struggle with historical fiction. I was pleasantly surprised; this was so enjoyable for me because the story focused on the family's day-to-day lives over time. It read like relatable historical literary fiction.
Energy: Consoling. Conscientious. Hopeful.
Scene: 🏴 A multi-story home on a bustling street in Bath, England, in the late 1700s
Perspective: We follow our main character, the daughter of a painter, from 11 years old in the 1750s and as an adult in the 1770s. We also get the perspective of an innkeeper’s adult child in the 1720s.
🐕 Howls: Meg’s chapters and Peggy’s internal conflict about romance were more challenging for me to stay interested in (that’s just a me thing).
🐩 Tail Wags: The sister’s relationship and resulting conflicts. Exploring a 1700s city through a child’s eyes. The writing style and prose.
🤔 Random Thoughts:
- I loved the balance of tension and coziness. Since we see the world from a child's point of view, we often learn about life along with the girls, so I didn’t have to rely on Google to make up for my less-than-stellar knowledge of historical facts.
- Meg's perspective felt like a separate story, and I lost interest. Her viewpoint is still relevant, but it was fast-paced and jarring to me. Other readers may enjoy it more though!
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🎬 Tale-Telling: The writing is light, poetic, and elegant without appearing pretentious. The narrative is time-jumping but linear. The narrator’s voice was relaxing and easy to listen to.
👥 Characters: Likeable, resilient main characters that were easy to root for. Each family member has their own way of dealing with Molly’s condition (some in cruel, dismissive ways!)
🤓 Reader Role: Time-traveling bystander watching events unfold and seeing how the characters handle them.
🗺️ World-Building: Immersive, sensory, atmospheric, vibrant.
🔥 Fuel: What is happening with Molly? Can she be helped? Why do certain things trigger their mother, and why won’t she talk about her past? As the story evolves, we see them grow up and face adult challenges together. Although Molly’s mental health is a major part of the plot, other elements drive the story, from meeting new family members to Peg’s aspirations for her future and the discoveries she makes about her parents. From Meg’s perspective, there’s some withholding at first, but her perspective becomes more revelatory as we connect the dots and wonder how she’ll handle her situation and survive.
📖 Cred: Blending of historical facts with fictional characters and events
🚙 Journey: Slow burn, scenic, bittersweet, winding path. The ending is conclusive but abrupt and sad if you get attached to one of the characters.
Mood Reading Match-Up:
- Horse hooves, leather, creaking floorboards, string instruments, brushes on canvas, children laughing, mud, whispers and giggles, acrid smoke, dark and stuffy rooms, fireplaces crackling
- Coming-of-age sibling dynamics
- Atmospheric historical fiction family sagas and struggles
Content Heads-Up: Mental illness (child and adult; descriptive, on page; dissociating, panic). Blood, body fluids. Pregnancy. Financial insecurity/homelessness. Loss of child (brief recall, off page). Misogyny. Patriarchy (opinions and limitations for women). Medical (mystery illness, weakness, loss of consciousness). Death.
Rep: Heterosexual. Cisgender. White British characters.
📚 Format: Audible
My musings 💖 powered by puppy snuggles 🐶 refined with my AI bookworm buddy ✨
Graphic: Mental illness
Moderate: Blood, Medical content, and Pregnancy