Why Join?

  • Add New Books

  • Write a Review

  • Backpack Reading Lists

  • Monthly Newsletter

Join Now

The Portrain

The Portrain

Author(s): Iain Pears

Location(s): Brittany

Genre(s): Fiction, Mystery

Era(s): Modern

Location

Content

Set on the bleak and windy island of Houat near the coast of Brittany, The Portrait describes the retreat into isolation of the painter Henry MacAlpine, who has performed a Gauguin-like cutting off of his previous life, leaving a successful career in London (not to mention rich patrons and enthusiastic gallery owners) behind him for a more spartan existence in this unvisited spot. Several years pass, and the reclusive MacAlpine is called upon by the first person he has seen from his old life in four years. This is the art critic William Nasmyth, whose approbation (or otherwise) can make or destroy an artist’s career. He has come, he says, to sit for a portrait. What follows is a remarkable battle of wills between two very driven individuals: a psychological duel that has echoes of the mordant writing in the early plays of Harold Pinter. The other analogy that springs to mind for Pears’ compelling and disturbing novel is the Ingmar Bergman film Persona, similarly set on a remote island, which also treats of a personality shift between two strong-willed individuals. During the course of the sitting, the real subject of the novel becomes clear through the conversation of the two men: this is a scarifying narrative of thwarted desire, cruelty, suicide and even murder. This spare and economical novel exerts a grip from the first paragraph, and its two main protagonists are drawn with assiduously observed detail. –Barry Forshaw

Review this Book

To review this book, please

Log in

Book Reviews

Lead Review

Ingmar Bergman, this is a black novel….maybe Pinterish. A weird and wonderful novel. – Stella Blashnick –

Read review

Latest Blogs