This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Hardcover
Dewey Decimal Number: 759.9492
EAN: 9780060825416
ISBN: 0060825413
Label: Harper
Manufacturer: Harper
Number Of Items: 1
Number Of Pages: 368
Publication Date: July 01, 2008
Publisher: Harper
Release Date: June 24, 2008
Studio: Harper
Alternate Versions: Click to Display
Related Items:
Browse for similar items by category:
Editorial Review:Product Description: As riveting as a World War II thriller,
The Forger's Spell is the true story of Johannes Vermeer and the small-time Dutch painter who dared to impersonate him centuries later. The con man's mark was Hermann Goering, one of the most reviled leaders of Nazi Germany and a fanatic collector of art.
It was an almost perfect crime. For seven years a no-account painter named Han van Meegeren managed to pass off his paintings as those of one of the most beloved and admired artists who ever lived. But, as Edward Dolnick reveals, the reason for the forger's success was
not his artistic skill. Van Meegeren was a mediocre artist. His true genius lay in psychological manipulation, and he came within inches of fooling both the Nazis and the world. Instead, he landed in an Amsterdam court on trial for his life.
ARTnews called Dolnick's previous book, the Edgar Award-winning
The Rescue Artist, "the best book ever written on art crime." In
The Forger's Spell, the stage is bigger, the stakes are higher, and the villains are blacker.
Average Rating:

Rating:

-
A well written and informative story of one of the greatest hoaxes in art history. Being a novice to the art world, I was worried upon beginning the book that I might not understand the complexities of art forgery. However Dolnick's writing was understandable and intriguing even to a novice.
Rating:

-
I'm a reader of non-fiction, and too many non-fiction books suffer from the author's need to sensationalize the story. Not so here: the story is sensational on its own. I found it to be uniformly interesting and enjoyable.
If I were to complain about anything, it would be Dolnick's apologies for the art experts who were fooled. But this is minor carping.
Rating:

-
The story of how Hans van Meergeren faked Vermeer paintings and fooled the experts and Goering is now 60 years old and has been told many times. This retelling is somewhat gee-whiz and frenetic (60 breezy chapters in 300 pages) although Dolnick appears to have done all the relevant homework. It skips around, repeats itself, and needs editing. For a book which is about how just looking at pictures fooled so many, its own pictures are too few and too small - deprives the reader of the pleasure of ...
Read More
Rating:

-
My impression from reading other reviews of this book are that those who criticized it did so for one (or more) of 4 reasons. Either (1) it's not as good as his previous book "The Rescue Artist", (2) Van Megeeren's story has been told better by other authors, (3) it's redundant in parts and/or (4) it trivializes the evil nature of the Nazi's. I had not read The Rescue Artist and, philistine that I must be, was not familiar with Van Megeeren's story. However, I must say that I thought this book ...
Read More
Rating:

-
"The Forger's Spell" offers up a cartoon version of history, leavened, to ill effect, by bombastic and cliche-ridden writing. Edward Dolnick seems to think of the Van Meegeren story as a light-hearted romp through World War II, where war criminals like Hermann Goering are shown to be "rubes" by the clever forger. That Van Meegeren himself was a Nazi-sympathizer seems unimportant in this storyline, as does the fact that there was nothing particularly humorous about the Nazi occupation of the Netherlands. ...
Read More
| Mall Directory Front Page | Shopper Favorites Web Search |
MALL.ShopperFavorites.com
|
|
|