What is your favorite museum
to visit? My family loves visiting
museums . . . except for my 12-year-old daughter. She loves living history museums, but not
regular museums. I don’t know if I have
one favorite museum as I love learning from all of them. I have always enjoyed visiting the Kalamazoo
Air Zoo with my Dad as I love aviation history.
Visiting the various Little House on the Prairie museums in Minnesota
and South Dakota was a thrill.
The Magnolia Palace by
Fiona Davis was the April pick for the Page-turners Book Club at the Kewaunee
Public Library. We had a great
discussion about it last week.
The Magnolia Palace is a
dual narrative historical fiction novel.
In 1919, Lillian Carter is at a crossroads in life. She is only twenty-one, but she is washed up
as the most famous “super model” of the day.
In her teens she had posed for many artists and her sculptures are all
over Manhattan. Now after her manager
mother’s death, she is having a hard time getting a job. When she gets mistakenly wrapped up in her
landlord’s murder of his wife, she decides it’s time to try something new. She goes undercover and becomes the private
secretary to Helen Frick, the daughter of the very rich Henry Clay Frick. His dream is to leave his mansion as an art
museum when he dies. Will Lillian’s past
come back to haunt her?
In the 1960’s, Veronica
Weber is a model in a photo shoot at the Frick Museum. When she is mistakenly locked in the museum
during a snowstorm, she gets involved in a treasure hunt using clues that are
tied to the famous paintings together with Joshua, a young curator and college
student. Will the clues help them to
unravel one of the biggest mysteries at the museum?
I greatly enjoyed this
novel. I really liked the mystery and
how it was unraveled with both narratives in both timelines. I also liked the look at how models were
treated in 1919 compared to the 1960s. Lillian
was intriguing, and I was even more intrigued in the afterword and through videos
we watched at book club to learn more about the tragic real-life figure she was
based on. Helen Frick was very
interesting as well. I was slightly distressed
that she was written as an abrasive character.
Was she being written that was because she was a strong woman who
accomplished a lot in life? Then we
learned more in book club, I realized how much research Fiona Davis had done to
make sure she accurately captured her personality. The Frick family had such a sad and tragic
story. It has made me really want to visit
this museum in New York City.
Book Source: The Kewaunee Public Library. Thank you!
I love visiting museums, too...from the Louvre in Paris to the Natural History Museum here in SLC, Utah. And I'd love to visit the Little House museums someday. :D
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