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LEONORA IN THE MORNING LIGHT by Michaela Carter

LEONORA IN THE MORNING LIGHT

by Michaela Carter

Pub Date: April 6th, 2021
ISBN: 978-1-982120-51-1
Publisher: Avid Reader Press

A novel based on true events exploring the life, love, and work of surrealist painter and writer Leonora Carrington.

Set against the backdrop of World War II, the novel shifts among the perspectives of Leonora; Max Ernst, her lover and fellow surrealist; and Peggy Guggenheim, the art collector and socialite. Twenty-year-old Leonora has spent her entire life rebelling against her upper-class British upbringing. When she meets Max at a dinner party, their attraction is immediate and all-consuming. Twenty-six years her senior, he brings her into his circle of artists, which includes Pablo Picasso, Andre Breton, and Salvador Dalí. Their relationship turns her into “the sort of woman her father most feared she’d become—an unmarried artist.” In their home in France, the two live in bliss for a few years—painting, exploring nature, and making love—before the war tears them apart. Max, a German citizen marked as “degenerate," is put into an internment camp, then reaches out to Peggy for help escaping Europe. Peggy, who has been trying to save artists (and their artwork) from the Nazis, begins to fall in love with Max—a man she knows will never fully love her back. Carter’s lyrical and poetic prose often embodies the strange, unnerving qualities of surrealism: “Light had flashed through the marrow of her bones and she’d lain as if electrocuted, ignited, having flown beyond the margins of her skin.” Throughout the novel, Carter meditates beautifully on the unique difficulties of being a woman artist. Near the end, Leonora is looking at a Frida Kahlo painting when she has an anguished realization about Kahlo: “She hides nothing. To become the master, she has killed the muse. It is that simple.” No longer willing to be only a muse, Leonora comes into her own.

A satisfying historical novel about love, art, and war.