The Artist by Lucy Steeds Audiobook Review - A Sensory Feast
The World of 'The Artist'
When a British journalist named Joseph Adelaide tracks down a reclusive artist to his remote farmhouse in the south of France, his plan is to interview him for a magazine profile. Edouard Tartuffe is a revered painter who was taught by Cézanne and is known on the Parisian art scene as the “Master of Light”. But then he retreated from the limelight amid rumours of a feud with his former mentor.
A Sensory Experience
Lucy Steeds’s evocative novel is set over a summer in Provence in 1920 where the landscape shimmers, the cicadas hum and “sunlight radiates from the yellow fields”. Steeds’ book is as much a sensory as literary experience as the listener is immersed in the heady smell of turpentine and the pungent stink of still life fruit and fish arrangements deliberately left to rot in the Provençal heat.
The Performance
The reader is Tanya Reynolds, who imbues the mystery of the brutish Tata and his withdrawal from the world with atmosphere and slow-burning tension. Joseph believes the key to understanding this once-towering artist lies with the quiet, contemplative Ettie, who has lived with her uncle since childhood and is harbouring secrets of her own.
Further Listening Recommendations
- Sanctuary by Marina Warner, William Collins, 12hr 56min - A moving essay series on the places we choose to live.
- Am I Having Fun Now? by Suzi Ruffell, Bluebird, 8hr 54min - A memoir about growing up as a working-class queer woman and a self-help manual on how to navigate life.