Available Formats
The Portrait: From the author of THE GIRLS ARE GOOD
By (Author) Ilaria Bernardini
Atlantic Books
Allen & Unwin
28th April 2020
Main
United Kingdom
General
Fiction
Contemporary lifestyle fiction
853.92
Hardback
432
Width 146mm, Height 223mm, Spine 37mm
655g
When well-known businessman Martin Acla's stroke makes the news headlines, celebrated author Valeria Costas's world impldes; as Martin's secret lover for the past thirty years the idea of losing him is beyond comprehension. Desperate to find a way to be alongside him during his final days, Valeria commissions Martin's artist wife to paint her portrait and so inserts herself into his family home - and life.
In the grand mansion house in west London where the man they share lies comatose, Valeria and Isla remain poised on the brink - and transfixed by each other. Does Isla's know of her sitter's long involvement with her husband Does Martin know she's there in his house And what about the fact that Valeria's mother is simultaneously losing her own battle with life hundreds of miles away in Rhodes As the portrait starts to take shape, we watch these singular women struggle while the love of their lives departs - taking with him much of what has defined each of them.
In its nuanced description of two very different people and the secrets they keep we're tossed high and low in an unforgettable tale reminiscent of Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan Quartet and Zoe Heller's Notes on a Scandal. Filled with deception and mystery, The Portrait is a breathless dance that intrigues until the very end.
A gripping story of love, death, art and deceit, which is also strange, beautiful and deeply original. The Portrait is unlike anything else I've read. -- Sofka Zinovieff, author of PUTNEY
as brisk as an easterly breeze . . . A thread of deliciously dark humour is woven into this involving web of performances and fictions; Bernardini is good on the magical thinking of grief, too. Not all will swallow the final twist, but it's nonetheless a salutary reminder that we are players in others' stories, even as we are consumed by our own. -- Stephanie Cross * Daily Mail *
Italian novelist Ilaria Bernardini's English language debut is a nuanced exploration of love, grief, deceit and secrets. When well-known businessman Martin has a devastating stroke, his secret lover Valeria Costas formulates a way to be by his bedside during his final days. She commissions Martin's artist wife Isla to paint her portrait, furtively inserting herself into his home, where both women simultaneously struggle to cope while the man they love lies in a coma. This is an affecting story that brings to mind Elena Ferrante's Neapolitan Novels. * Culturefly *
For 30 years, author Valeria Costas has conducted an affair with Martin Acla, a well-known businessman. After he suffers
a stroke, she's desperate to find a way to be close to him and commissions his wife, Isla, to paint her portrait. This rich,
seductive novel unfolds over a series of sittings in the London home where Martin lies in a coma. The question of how much Isla really knows adds suspense to a riveting story rich in feeling and humour.
The premise of this novel - a woman painting the portrait of her husband's mistress - is irresistible and full of dramatic possibilities. Valeria, a famous writer, is overwhelmed with joy when her lover's wife, Isla, agrees to paint her. Martin, with whom she has shared much of her life in passionate secrecy, has had a stroke and is now in a
coma. Valeria can be near him by attending sittings.
Bernardini's prose is wistful and gentle, with atmospheric descriptions of place, like Martin's hushed Holland Park
home, where he lies upstairs while his wife and lover sit opposite one another downstairs. The intensity of feeling pulses through the rooms. And there is a faint menace hovering throughout: how much of the truth is really known
The portrait itself takes its place as a decisive symbol. As the finished result is revealed, something far bigger emerges that feels both astonishing and right. You close Bernardini's work with a quiet reverence.
. . . a dizzying and impassioned story of love, deception and loss [ . . . ] irresistible.
The central relationship of Valeria, Ilsa and Antonia is beautifully rendered and complex, prioritising truth over aesthetics, but finding beauty in this process. Here, the stereotypical rivalry between wife and lover is broken down and examined through skilful characterisation and dynamic plot. It is not always clear who to root for, with many conflicting perspectives and shifts in sympathy throughout, but as Ilsa says of portraiture, "the winner is the one who gets to tell the story".
Ilaria Bernardini is a prolific, bestselling Italian screenwriter and author of 8 novels, whose latest, Faremo Foresta ('We Will Grow a Forest') was longlisted for Italy's prestigious Strega Prize. She is a Vogue columnist and regular contributor for Rolling Stone and GQ magazines. She co-wrote the late renowned director Bernardo Bertolucci's last film, The Echo Chamber. Based in Milan, she splits her time between there and London.